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| Yale Patt Named 2013 Recipient of IEEE CS Harry H. Goode AwardYale N. Patt, professor of electrical and computer engineering and the Ernest Cockrell Jr. Centennial Chair in Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin, has been selected as the 2013 recipient of the IEEE Computer Society Harry H Goode Award.
Patt was named the recipient of the award "for nearly half a century of significant contributions to information processing, including microarchitecture insights, a breakaway textbook, and mentoring future leaders." The Goode Award was established to recognize achievement in the information- For more than four decades Patt has combined an active research program with consulting and teaching. In 1965, he introduced the WOS module, the first complex logic gate implemented on a single piece of silicon. In 1985, he and students Wen-mei Hwu, Steve Melvin, and Mike Shebanow introduced HPS, a high-performance microarchitecture that exploits instruction- Patt's current research focuses on the potential challenges of 2020-era microprocessors, which are slated to contain more than 30 billion transistors. This includes breaking the abstraction layers that separate the problem statement in a natural language (like English) from the electronic circuits that actually execute the program. Among his projects is MorphCore, a reconfigurable microprocessor that can be an aggressive out-of-order processor when the amount of instruction- Patt is also working on improving the interface between the processor core and the DRAMs, on creating GPUs for non-graphics- Patt's teaching focus has always been on understanding the fundamentals. Initially at University of Michigan Ann Arbor in electrical engineering and computer science and subsequently at UT in electrical and computer engineering, Patt overhauled the first required computing course for undergraduate majors. His "motivated bottom-up approach" is the theme of the textbook, "Introduction to Computing Systems: from bits and gates to C and beyond" (McGraw-Hill) Patt was the recipient of the 1995 IEEE Emannuel R. Piore Medal "for contributions to computer architecture leading to commercially viable high-performance microprocessors," Among his teaching commendations are the ACM Karl V. Karlstrom Outstanding Educator Award for 2000 and the 2002 Texas Excellence Teaching Award for The University of Texas at Austin College of Engineering. He was elected in 2011 to The University of Texas Academy of Distinguished Teachers. Patt earned his bachelor of science degree at Northeastern University and his master's degree and PhD at Stanford University, all in electrical engineering. He is a Fellow of both IEEE and ACM. The Goode Award consists of a bronze medal and a $2,000 honorarium. To view the list of recipients, visit http://www.computer.org/ About the IEEE Computer Society The IEEE Computer Society is the world’s leading computing membership organization and the trusted information and career-development source for a global workforce of technology leaders including: professors, researchers, software engineers (http://www.computer.org/ End
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