Carnegie Mellon’s David Brumley Receives Prestigious Early Career Award from National Science Foundation
March 29, 2010
Contact: Chriss Swaney
Carnegie Mellon University
412.268.5776
PITTSBURGH-Carnegie Mellon University's David Brumley has received the National Science Foundation's Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award, its most prestigious award for junior faculty.
Brumley,
35, an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer
Engineering and the School of Computer Science, received a five-year, $521,494
award to develop a system that will track and eliminate annoying software bugs.
"Software
is riddled with bugs. Most of these bugs are unimportant for security, while a
few allow hackers to take control of a computer," Brumley said. "The goal of
this research is to find the exploitable bugs so that they can be fixed first
before they can be used by hackers."
The
research will investigate novel techniques, approaches, and algorithms for
finding exploitable bugs.
"The
ability to determine whether a bug is exploitable or not will allow developers
to prioritize bug reports so that the most security-critical bugs are fixed
first. The techniques investigated also will help developers distribute patches
safely," said Brumley, who also recently participated in a DARPA-sponsored
program to inform a new generation of researchers about the Department of
Defense's information technology needs and priorities.
"This
is a wonderful award for such an innovative researcher and outstanding
instructor. David Brumley's research and his attention to detail when it comes
to his students is what Carnegie Mellon is all about. We applaud this great
work," said Ed Schlesinger, head of Carnegie Mellon's Department of Electrical
and Computer Engineering.
Brumley's
research interests also include the areas of computer security, network security
and applied cryptography. He received his undergraduate degree in mathematics
in 1998 from the University of Northern Colorado, a master's degree in computer
science in 2003 from Stanford University and a Ph.D. in computer science in
2008 from Carnegie Mellon.