Professor Laxmikant Kale is the director
of the Parallel Programming Laboratory
and the Paul and Cynthia Saylor Professor of Computer Science at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign. Prof. Kale has been working on various aspects of
parallel computing, with a focus on enhancing performance and
productivity via adaptive runtime systems, and with the belief that
only interdisciplinary research involving multiple CSE and other
applications can bring back well-honed abstractions into Computer
Science that will have a long-term impact on the state-of-art. His
collaborations include the widely used Gordon-Bell award winning
(SC 2002) biomolecular simulation program NAMD, and other
collaborations on computational cosmology, quantum chemistry, rocket
simulation, space-time meshes, and other unstructured mesh
applications. He takes pride in his group's success in distributing
and supporting software embodying his research ideas, including
Charm++, Adaptive MPI and the BigSim framework. He and his team won the
HPC Challenge award at Supercomputing 2011, for their entry based on Charm++.
L. V. Kale received the B.Tech degree in Electronics Engineering from
Benares Hindu University, Varanasi, India in 1977, and a
M.E. degree in Computer Science from Indian Institute of Science
in Bangalore, India, in 1979. He received a Ph.D. in computer
science in from State University of New York, Stony Brook, in
1985.