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Samuel Madden (computer scientist)

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(Redirected from Samuel Madden (MIT)) American computer scientist
Samuel Madden
Born (1976-08-04) August 4, 1976 (age 48)
San Diego, California, United States
EducationMassachusetts Institute of Technology (B.S. and M.Eng., 1999)
UC Berkeley (PhD, 2003)
Known forTinyDB, C-Store,
TelegraphCQ,
H-Store
Scientific career
FieldsComputer Science
InstitutionsMassachusetts Institute of Technology
Doctoral advisorMichael J. Franklin and Joseph M. Hellerstein
Websitedb.csail.mit.edu/madden

Samuel R. Madden (born August 4, 1976) is an American computer scientist specializing in database management systems. He is currently a professor of computer science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Career

Madden was born and raised in San Diego, California. After completing bachelor's and master's degrees at MIT, he earned a PhD specializing in database management at the University of California Berkeley under Michael Franklin and Joseph M. Hellerstein. Before joining MIT as a tenure-track professor, Madden held a post-doc position at Intel's Berkeley Research center.

Madden has been involved several database research projects, including TinyDB, TelegraphCQ, Aurora/Borealis, C-Store, and H-Store. In 2005, at the age of 29, he was named to the TR35 as one of the Top 35 Innovators Under 35 by MIT Technology Review magazine. Recent projects include DataHub - a "github for data" platform that provides hosted database storage, versioning, ingest, search, and visualization (commercialized as Instabase), CarTel - a distributed wireless platform that monitors traffic and on-board diagnostic conditions in order to generate road surface reports, and Relational Cloud - a project investigating research issues in building a database-as-a-service. Madden has published more than 250 scholarly articles, with more than 59,000 citations, with an h-index of 101.

In addition, Madden is a co-founder of Cambridge Mobile Telematics and Vertica Systems. Before enrolling at MIT and while an undergraduate student there, Madden wrote printer driver software for Palomar Software, a San Diego-area Macintosh software company. He is also a Technology Expert at Omega Venture Partners.

Awards and recognitions

Madden won a National Science Foundation CAREER Award in 2004 and a Sloan Research Fellowship in 2007.

He received VLDB's best paper award in 2007 and VLDB's test of time award in 2015 for his 2005 paper on C-Store.

He also received a test of time award in SIGMOD 2013 for his 2003 paper The Design of an Acquisitional Query Processor for Sensor Networks.

In 2020 he was named a fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery.

He received the 2024 SIGMOD Edgar F. Codd Innovations Award for his contributions to multiple aspects of data management, including column-oriented database systems, high performance transaction processing, and systems for mobile and sensor data.

References

  1. Madden, Samuel (2003). The design and evaluation of a query processing architecture for sensor networks (Thesis). University of California at Berkeley.
  2. "UC Berkeley Alumni Notes - November 1, 2013". 2013. Retrieved March 6, 2023.
  3. ^ Madden, S. R.; Franklin, M. J.; Hellerstein, J. M.; Hong, W. (2005). "TinyDB: An acquisitional query processing system for sensor networks". ACM Transactions on Database Systems. 30: 122–173. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.63.2473. doi:10.1145/1061318.1061322. S2CID 2239670.
  4. ^ Chandrasekaran, S.; Shah, M. A.; Cooper, O.; Deshpande, A.; Franklin, M. J.; Hellerstein, J. M.; Hong, W.; Krishnamurthy, S.; Madden, S. R.; Reiss, F. (2003). "TelegraphCQ". Proceedings of the 2003 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data - SIGMOD '03. p. 668. doi:10.1145/872757.872857. ISBN 978-1581136340. S2CID 14965874.
  5. Samuel Madden publications indexed by Microsoft Academic
  6. Samuel Madden publications indexed by Google Scholar
  7. Samuel Madden at DBLP Bibliography Server Edit this at Wikidata
  8. Intel (2005). "Intel Research Berkeley Biography". Archived from the original on March 30, 2008. Retrieved August 30, 2008.
  9. MIT Technology Review (2005). "2005 Young Innovators Under 35". Retrieved August 30, 2008.
  10. Elizabeth A. Thomson (2005). "MIT shines in Tech Review's innovators list". Retrieved August 30, 2008.
  11. "Google Scholar Samuel Madden". 2021. Retrieved October 13, 2021.
  12. "Cambridge Mobile Telematics - Who We Are". 2021. Retrieved October 13, 2021.
  13. "Sam Madden LinkedIn profile".
  14. "Omega Venture Partners". Retrieved 2021-12-19.
  15. "CAREER: MACAQUE - Managing Ambiguity and Complexity in Acquisitional QUery Environments". National Science Foundation. 2005.
  16. "Fellows Database". Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Retrieved 2023-11-21.
  17. "VLDB 2007 Best Paper Awards". Very Large Databases Endowment. Retrieved 2023-11-17.
  18. "VLDB Test of Time Award". www.vldb.org. Retrieved 2021-04-12.
  19. "2013 SIGMOD Test of Time Award". SIGMOD. Retrieved 2023-11-21.
  20. "2020 ACM Fellows Recognized for Work that Underpins Today's Computing Innovations". Retrieved 23 March 2024.
  21. "SIGMOD 2024: Awards". SIGMOD. Retrieved 2024-05-25.


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