Biography:Samuel Madden (computer scientist)

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Short description: American computer scientist
Samuel Madden
MIT-SamuelMadden.jpg
Born (1976-08-04) August 4, 1976 (age 47)
San Diego, California
NationalityAmerican
CitizenshipUnited States
EducationMassachusetts Institute of Technology (B.S. and M.Eng., 1999)[1]
UC Berkeley (PhD, 2003)[2]
Known forTinyDB,[3] C-Store,
TelegraphCQ,[4]
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.[5][6][7][8]

Madden has been involved in a number database research projects, including TinyDB,[3] TelegraphCQ,[4] 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.[9][10] 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.[citation needed] Madden's has published more than 250 scholarly articles, with more than 59,000 citations, with an h-index of 101.[11]

In addition, Madden is a co-founder of Cambridge Mobile Telematics[12] 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 Partner at Omega Venture Partners.[13][14]

Awards and recognitions

Madden won a National Science Foundation CAREER Award in 2004 and a Sloan Research Fellowship in 2007.[15][16]

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.[17][18]

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.[19]

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. https://engineering.berkeley.edu/news/2013/11/alumni-notes-3/. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 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. doi:10.1145/1061318.1061322. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 Chandrasekaran, S.; Shah, M. A.; Cooper, O.; Deshpande, A.; Franklin, M. J.; Hellerstein, J. M.; Hong, W.; Krishnamurthy, S. et al. (2003). "TelegraphCQ". Proceedings of the 2003 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data - SIGMOD '03. pp. 668. doi:10.1145/872757.872857. ISBN 978-1581136340. 
  5. List of publications from Microsoft Academic
  6. Samuel Madden publications indexed by Google Scholar
  7. {{DBLP}} template missing ID and not present in Wikidata.
  8. Intel (2005). "Intel Research Berkeley Biography". http://www.intel.com/research/network/s_madden.htm. 
  9. MIT Technology Review (2005). "2005 Young Innovators Under 35". http://www.technologyreview.com/TR35/Profile.aspx?Cand=T&TRID=104. 
  10. Elizabeth A. Thomson (2005). "MIT shines in Tech Review's innovators list". http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2005/tr35.html. 
  11. "Google Scholar Samuel Madden". 2021. https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=a1ngrCIAAAAJ&hl=en. 
  12. "Cambridge Mobile Telematics - Who We Are". 2021. https://www.cmtelematics.com/who-we-are/. 
  13. "Sam Madden LinkedIn profile". https://www.linkedin.com/in/samuel-madden-8ba0835/. 
  14. "Omega Venture Partners" (in en-US). https://www.omegavp.com/. 
  15. "CAREER: MACAQUE - Managing Ambiguity and Complexity in Acquisitional QUery Environments". 2005. https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=0448124. 
  16. "Fellows Database". https://sloan.org/fellows-database?page=192. 
  17. "VLDB 2007 Best Paper Awards". https://www.vldb.org/archives/website/2007/program/best_paper_award.html. 
  18. "VLDB Test of Time Award". https://www.vldb.org/awards_10year.html. 
  19. "2013 SIGMOD Test of Time Award". https://sigmod.org/sigmod-awards/citations/2013-sigmod-test-of-time-award/.