Kirk W. Cameron
Director, SCAPE Laboratory
Associate Professor
Department of Computer Science
Virginia Tech
Blacksburg, VA 24060

562 McBryde Hall
cameron at cs dot vt dot edu 540-231-4238 (voice)
540-231-6075 (fax)

Education

B.S.: Mathematics, University of Florida, Gainesville, 1994
Ph.D.: Computer Science, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, 2000

Research

Scalable Performance Laboratory
Publications
CV
Teaching Statement [html] [pdf]

Teaching

VT -- CS 4504 Computer Organization (Spring 2007)
VT -- CS 5504 Computer Architecture (Spring 2007)
VT -- CS 4504 Computer Organization (Spring 2006)
USC -- CSCE 790 Power-conscious Computing (Spring 2005)
USC -- CSCE 513 Computer Architecture (Fall 2004)
USC -- CSCE 513 Computer Architecture (Fall 2003)
USC -- CSCE 717 Performance and Reliability Analysis (Spring 2003)
USC -- CSCE 513 Computer Architecture (Fall 2002)
USC -- CSCE 713 Advanced Computer Architecture (Spring 2002)

Biographical Sketch

Kirk W. Cameron is an associate professor of Computer Science at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. He received his Ph.D. from Louisiana State University in August 2000. Cameron began research in performance analysis concurrently as a graduate student at LSU and a graduate associate working at Los Alamos National Laboratory. Professor Cameron is currently Director of the Scalable Performance (SCAPE) Laboratory at Virginia Tech where he conducts research to improve the efficiency of high-performance systems. Prof. Cameron pioneered the area of high-performance, power-aware computing beginning in 2002 for which he was honored with an NSF Career Award in 2004. Also in 2004, he was awarded a DOE Early Career Principal Investigator Award to continue research to improve memory performance in high-end systems. His research interests span power and performance in applications and systems. His work has appeared in top international conferences and journals including IEEE Transactions on Computers and IEEE Computer. Other research awards include the USC College of Engineering and Information Technology Young Investigator Research Award (2005), best paper nomination (SC 2006), VT College of Engineering Faculty Fellow (2007), and an IBM Faculty Award (2007).


Jason