A computer science doctoral candidate from University of Massachusetts Amherst has been awarded a 2012 Google Fellowship in Software Performance, one of 14 Phd-level student fellowships awarded in North America.
The Google U.S./Canada PhD Student Fellowship Program recognizes exemplary doctoral students in computer science and related research areas.
For winning, Charles Curtsinger, a doctoral candidate in computer science, will receive two year?s worth of funding for tuition, fees and a yearly stipend. He also will have access to a research mentor from Google, according to a press release issued by UMass Amherst.
Curtsinger?s work focuses on developing automatic methods for analyzing application performance, according to the press release. The goal is to help programmers find and fix performance problems and make software faster, the press release said.
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