HoTSoS 2021: Meet the Program Committee Members!

Meet the HoTSoS 2021 Team:

Program Committee Members

The HoTSoS Symposium is growing every year, and with it, we have decided to expand our Program Committee this year. For the next few weeks we will be creating news items introducing different Chairs & Members. 

For this first posting, we are happy to introduce our HoTSoS 2021 Program Comittee Members Jeff Carver (University of Alabama), Eric Clemons (NSA), Brad Martin (NSA), and Kevin Kornegay (Morgan State University). Welcome to the team!

About the Chairs

Jeff Carver, Ph.D., (University of Maryland, 2013) earned his B.S. in Computer Science from Louisiana State University in 1997. He is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Alabama and a member of the Software Engineering Research Group (http://se.cs.ua.edu). He is a Senior Member of the IEEE Computer Society and a Senior Member of the ACM.

Dr. Carver’s research focuses on understanding and improving the software engineering process for all types of software ranging from traditional Business/IT software to Open-source software, to Scientific software. His specific interests include empirical software engineering, software quality, software engineering for computational science and engineering, human factors in software engineering and software process improvement. His research has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the National Security Agency, and the Department of Defense.

Eric Clemons is lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum

Brad Martin is a Cybersecurity Subject Matter Expert (SME) within NSA’s Laboratory for Advanced Cybersecurity Research, the U.S. government’s premier cybersecurity research and design center; focused on conducting and sponsoring collaborative research in the technologies and techniques which will secure America’s information systems of tomorrow. Mr. Martin has a strong history in the area of high confidence software and systems research and development, having initiated research groups at NSA supporting development of scientific foundations and technologies for innovative systems design, systems and embedded application software, and assurance and verification to enable the routine production of reliable, robust, safe, secure, and certifiably dependable IT-centric physical and engineered systems.

 

Mr. Martin serves as Co-Chair of the Networking and Information Technology Research and Development (NITRD) Program’s Computing-Enabled Networked Physical Systems (CNPS) Interagency Working Group (IWG). The CNPS IWG coordinates Federal R&D to advance and assure information technology-enabled systems that integrate the cyber/information, physical, and human elements. Additionally, Mr. Martin previously served as the Chair of the Special Cyber Operations Research and Engineering (SCORE) Subcommittee, a Subcommittee of the NSTC Committee on Homeland & National Security. The SCORE Subcommittee is focused on enhancing coordination and collaboration across the classified cyber research community, and specifically scoped for science and technology for national security needs in cyber. 

Kevin Kornegay is lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum

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