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Jack Baskin School of Engineering
Technology for a Changing World
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Tyler Rey Sorensen
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Title
Assistant Professor, Computer Science and Engineering
Department
Computer Science and Engineering
Office Location
Engineering 2 Room 233
Office Hours
By Appointment
Biography
I am an Assistant Professor at University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering. My research interests are in concurrency: programming, modeling, testing, and architecture. In particular, I am interested in exploring new programming models that enable development of correct and efficient applications on interesting (i.e. new or emerging) architectures. I see GPGPU programming as pragmatic avenue to explore different ideas in concurrency (and also programming GPUs is fun!). Given this, much of my work is framed using GPGPU. I am an invited individual contributer to the Khronos Group where we think about how to evolve official standards. Previously, I was a Post Doc at Princeton working in Margaret Martonosi’s group. I received my PhD from the Multicore Programming Group at Imperial College London supervised by Alastair Donaldson. Even earlier, I worked with Ganesh Gopalakrishnan and Zvonimir Rakamaric at University of Utah for my undergrad degree and MS. **I am currently looking for PhD students; please message me if the above description interests you!**
Research Areas
Concurrency: semantics, testing, verification
Heterogeneous Systems: GPUs, accelerators
Compilers: portability, optimizations
Web Page
Home Page
Selected Publications
Foundations of Empirical Memory Consistency Testing
One size doesn’t fit all: quantifying performance portability of graph applications on GPUs
GPU schedulers: how fair is fair enough?
Automatically comparing memory consistency models
Slow and Steady: Measuring and Tuning Multicore Interference
Degree
PhD in Computer Science, 2018, Imperial College London
MS in Computer Science, 2014, University of Utah
BSc in Computer Science, 2012, University of Utah
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