CS Faculty Candidate Colloquium

 

Monday                      ***Special Time and Location***
February 23
10:45 - 11:50 AM 
Kelley 1005

 

Rui Fan 
Ph.D. from MIT
Postdoctoral Fellow
University of Toronto

Lower Bounds in Distributed Computing 

The recent transition to multicore personal computers has been a cause
for both celebration and distress. On the one hand is the promise of
multicore processors to extend Moore's Law into the next decade. On the
other is the difficulty programmers have in taking full advantage of the
concurrency that hardware provides. Theoretical distributed computing
plays a key role in bridging this gap, by supplying both rigorous
analyses and sound intuitions to deal with the difficulties underlying
concurrency. This talk will focus on lower bounds for two fundamental
problems in distributed computing. First, we describe a tight lower
bound on the time complexity of mutual exclusion, resolving a
longstanding open problem. Our proof uses a novel information theoretic
technique with applications to other distributed computing problems.
Second, we describe a new clock synchronization problem which captures
the property of locality in radio networks. We describe a surprising
lower bound for this problem, and its implications and extensions.
Lastly, we will describe some ongoing work and interesting open
problems. 

Biography:

Rui Fan received his Ph.D. in computer science from MIT in 2008, and is
currently a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Toronto. His
dissertation received the MIT Sprowls Award for best doctoral theses in
computer science. He received his Bachelor of Science with honors in
computer science and mathematics from Caltech. His research focuses on
applying theoretical insights and techniques to practical problems in
distributed computing. His work has been the recipient of two Best
Student Paper awards from the ACM Principles of Distributed Computing
conference.

 

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