- David Black-Schaffer
- received his PhD in electrical engineering from Stanford
University in 2008 focusing on parallel programming systems for
many-core processors. After that he worked for at Apple
designing and developing the first implementation of the new
OpenCL specification for heterogeneous parallel processing on
CPUs and GPUs. He is currently an assistant professor at
Uppsala University looking at parallel programming systems and
runtimes.
- Iris Christadler
- Iris Christadler is a member of the scientific staff at the
Leibniz Computing Centre in Munich, Germany, where she is
responsible for HPC user support and performance optimization
of user codes on HPC systems. She is interested in debugging
and profiling tools, and is trying to "hyperscale" codes within
the European Grid Initiative DEISA.
Iris Christadler studied Computer Science at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany. Her studies, which she finished in 2004, were already centered on the fields of HPC computing, fluid dynamics, and multigrid methods. She wrote a term paper about patch-adaptive relaxation used as a smoother in a multigrid solver. The subject of her diploma thesis (MSc equivalent) was multigrid algorithms for the computation of optical flow problems using non-standard regularizers. She is currently working on highly optimized multigrid methods for image registration problems in close cooperation with Prof. Ruede at the University of Erlangen.
- Björn Engquist
- is professor in mathematics at University of Austin, Texas.
Formerly, he has had similar positions at Princeton University
and the University of California, Los Angeles. Professor
Engquist is also a professor of Numerical Analysis and
Computing Science at the Royal Institute of Technology in
Stockholm (KTH) since 1992. He received his B.S. in 1966 and
the Ph.D. in 1975 from Uppsala University, Sweden. Between 1966
and 1985, he held positions at the Courant Institute, the
University of California at Berkeley, Stanford University, and
Uppsala University. He is the chairman of KTH Center for
Computational Science and Engineering and former director of
Parallel and Scientific Computing Institute (PSCI) at KTH and
Uppsala University and the Center for Parallel Computers (PDC),
KTH. His principal research interests are the mathematics and
algorithms of scientific computing.
- Thomas Ericsson
- is working at Chalmers University of Technology. He is an
expert in high-performance computing and numerical analysis, in
particular in numerical linear algebra.
- Erik Hagersten
- Uppsala University, teaches courses in computer
architecture. His research focus is "Increase data processing
speed through adopting architectures and [coherent] data
replication." He works in both academia and industry in Sweden
and the US, and has initiated a collaborative research program
between Uppsala University and Sun's Engineering in the
U.S.
- Michael Hanke
- has been a university lecturer and docent at KTH since
1998. He received his Ph.D. in Mathematics from Humboldt
University of Berlin and has lectured in a variety of
universities throughout the world, including the Computing
Center of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR (Russia),
Johannes Kepler University (Austria), University of Zaragoza
(Spain), and University of Pittsburgh (USA). He has also worked
in industry as a Scientific Consultant for Comsol AB and UTRC
in East Hartford, Connecticut, USA. Michael's Scientific
Interests include analysis and numerical methods for
differential-algebraic equations, partial
differential-algebraic systems, and numerical approximation of
equations from semiconductor physics.
- Sverker Holmgren
- received a Ph.D. in Numerical Analysis from Uppsala
University in 1993. Since 2006, Holmgren is the Director of the
Swedish National Infrastructure for Computing (SNIC). SNIC is
the national computing infrastructure initiative within the
Swedish Research Council, with a mandate to provide high
performance computing, grid and large-scale storage resources
for academia in Sweden and to coordinate development activities
in these areas. Holmgren is also the chairman for the Swedish
National Graduate School in Scientific Computing (NGSSC). Since
2007, Holmgren is the Head of the Uppsala University program in
Computational Science and Engineering, where he leads several
research projects in CSE and large-scale computing.
- Niclas Jansson
- is a Ph.D. student in numerical analysis at CSC, KTH since
2008, and received an M.S. degree in computer science from KTH
in 2008. His research is focused on parallel adaptive finite
element methods.
- Lennart Johnsson
- is the Hugh Roy and Lillie Cranz Cullen Distinguished
Professor of Computer Science, Mathematics, and Electrical and
Computer Engineering at the University of Houston.
He received his M.S. degree in engineering physics in 1967 and the Ph.D. degree in Control Engineering in 1970 from Chalmers Institute of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden. At ASEA AB (now ABB), from 1971 to 1979, he led the development of real-time supervisory data acquisition and control systems for electric utilities and process industries. He was on the faculty of Caltech from 1979 to 1983, where he initiated a course in parallel scientific computation, taught VLSI design, and did research in parallel algorithms and VLSI design. From 1983 to 1990, he was an associate professor of Computer Science and of Electrical Engineering at Yale University, where he introduced courses in parallel scientific computation and also in computer arithmetic. He also led the research effort that resulted in the acquisition of the first Connection Machine at a university after MIT. He was Gordon McKay Professor at Harvard University from 1990 to 1997.
From 1986 to 1995, Johnsson also served as the director of Computational Sciences at Thinking Machines Corporation and was responsible for the development of the Connection Machine Scientific Software Library (CMSSL) as well as parts of the Connection Machine Run-Time System (CMRTS). Since 1995, he has been Cullen Distinguished Professor of Computer Science, Mathematics, and Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Houston; an adjunct professor of Computer Science at Rice University; and a visiting professor of Computing Sciences and Numerical Analysis at the Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm. He also serves as the director of both the Texas Learning and Computation Center at the University of Houston and the Houston Area Computational Science Consortium. Johnsson serves on the executive board of the W. M. Keck Center for Computational Biology in Houston and the Los Alamos Computer Science Institute; he is chair of the PDC External Advisory Committee and the Swedish National Allocations Committee for High-Performance Computation; and he is the editor of seven journals.
- Anders Lansner
- Anders Lansner is a the head of the department of
computational biology at KTH/CSC. His research fields include
computational neuroscience and brain-like computing. He does
project management, research, and graduate education and
supervision. He is manager of the CBN (Computational Biology
and Neurocomputing, formerly SANS) group at CSC. He also works
part time with the IAM group at SICS. He is leading the
computational neuroscience platform of Stockholm Brain
Institute (SBI) and the Swedish INCF node.
- Erwin Laure
- is the director of PDC-HPC. Before joining PDC in 2008 he
was the Technical Director of the EU funded project "Enabling
Grids for E-Science in Europe (EGEE)" working at the European
Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN). After joining CERN in
2002 he worked on data management issues within the EU DataGrid
(EDG) project, became the Technical Coordinator of EDG, and
coordinated the middleware re-engineering activities in the
first phase of EGEE. He holds a PhD in Business Administration
and Computer Science from the University of Vienna, Austria.
His research interests include grid computing with a focus on
data management in grid environments as well as programming
environments, languages, compilers and runtime systems for
parallel and distributed computing.
- Dag Lindbo
- is a Ph.D. student in numerical analysis at CSC, KTH since
2007, and received an M.S. degree in engineering physics from
KTH in 2006. He has been involved as a tutor in the PDC summer
course since 2007.
- Elisabet Molin
- received a M.Sc. in Applied Physics and Electrical
Engineering at Linköping University
in 2002. Developing and assessing computational models of
physical phenomena has enabled her to participate in research
projects at both CERN,
KTH and KI. Joining PDC in
2008, she brings a prospective user's perspective in
combination with an interest and experience in teaching.
- Jesper Oppelstrup
- is an assistant professor in the Department of Numerical
Analysis and Computing Science (NADA) at KTH. He received an
M.S. degree in 1969 in engineering physics, and the Ph.D.
degree in numerical analysis in 1976, both at KTH. He was a
research project manager at the Swedish Institute of Applied
Mathematics from 1977 to 1985, and he has worked in commercial
development of finite element software since 1984. He began
working at KTH in 1985, and he is currently an assistant
professor in numerical analysis. Oppelstrup is engaged in the
development of high-performance computing resources and
industry/academic collaborative research in high-performance
computing and mathematical modeling, especially for fluid
dynamics and electromagnetics. He is a member of the national
supercomputer resource allocation committee, he is on the
Program Board of the Parallel and Scientific Computing
Institute at KTH, and he is a member of the Swedish Society of
Mathematicians.
- Michael Schliephake
- Michael Schliephake started working at PDC in January 2010.
As a system administrator, he is concentrating on the operation
of PDC's HPC computer systems. After spending several years as
a software developer creating engineering software, he began
working in the area of HPC at the High Performance Computing Center
Stuttgart. There, Michael gained experience in the
installation and operation of cluster systems as well as in
several projects which were associated with the design and
implementation of supercomputing and grid infrastructures.
These projects were the German D- Grid Initiative and the European
projects DEISA and PRACE. Furthermore, he
brings with him his past experience educating students in HPC.
Michael obtained his qualified engineer degree at the Technical
University Leipzig.
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