Liuba Shrira
Liuba Shrira is a professor of computer science at Brandeis University, whose research interests primarily involve distributed systems.[1]
Liuba Shrira received her PhD from Technion.[1] She is affiliated with the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. Previously, she was a researcher in the MIT Programming Methodology Group (1986–1997), a visiting researcher at Microsoft Research (2004–2005),[1] and a visiting professor at Technion (2010–2011).[2]
She is a member of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), which has recognized her as a Distinguished Scientist in 2009, and the IEEE Computer Society.[1]
Shrira was one of the founding members of the Systers mailing list for women in computing.[3]
Selected publications
Some of Liuba Shrira's publications include:
- Barbara Liskov; Sanjay Ghemawat; Robert Gruber; Paul Johnson; Liuba Shrira; Michael Williams (1991). "Replication in the Harp File System". 13th ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles.[4]
- Rivka Ladin; Barbara Liskov; Liuba Shrira; Sanjay Ghemawat (1992). "Providing high availability using lazy replication". ACM Transactions on Computer Systems.[5]
- Chandrasekhar Boyapati; Barbara Liskov; Liuba Shrira (2003). "Ownership Types for Object Encapsulation". ACM Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages.[4]
References
- "Liuba Shrira". pages.cs.brandeis.edu.
- "Keynote Talk: Optimistic and pessimistic synchronization for data structures for in-memory stores | NETYS 2020" (in French). Retrieved 2020-02-01.
- "Founding Systers – AnitaB.org". anitaborg.org.
- "Liuba Shrira's publications". pmg.csail.mit.edu.
- Ladin, Rivka; Liskov, Barbara; Shrira, Liuba; Ghemawat, Sanjay (1 November 1992). "Providing high availability using lazy replication". ACM Transactions on Computer Systems. 10 (4): 360–391. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.586.7749. doi:10.1145/138873.138877. S2CID 2219840.
External links
External video | |
---|---|
ACID Objects and Modularity in the Cloud, Microsoft Research, 5 June 2012 | |
A New Approach to Old Storage, Google Tech Talks July 12, 2007 |