Three new members join us.
Three new undergraduate students, Hirotada Kiriyama, Tomoki Imai, and Kenta Fujita, join the group.
Three new undergraduate students, Hirotada Kiriyama, Tomoki Imai, and Kenta Fujita, join the group.
A paper on “A Source Code Recommendation System Based on Degree of Interest”, authored by Murakami, Masuhara, and Aotani will be presented in 183th IPSJ SIGSE workshop.
Okumura, Asakura, and Moriya presented their bachelor’s theses at the Tokyo Institute of Technology
Theses titles:
Nishiguchi, Murakami, and Shao presented their Master’s Theses at the University of Tokyo.
Theses titles:
We are looking for one postdoc researcher and one PhD student to join the Programming Research Group, lead by Prof. Hidehiko Masuhara, at Department of Mathematical and Computer Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology. The posts are funded by a JST CREST research project on Modularity for Supercomputing. The postdoc position is available immediately. The PhD position is for the terms from April 2014, but requires application by Jaunary 22, 2014.
The Programming Research Group is tasked with engaging in research on modular software development techniques for supercomputing, especially on design and implementation of domain-specific languages for prototyping highly-parallel scientific applications and for experimenting optimization techniques. The project continues until March 2017. Candidates will be responsible for conducting research on advanced techniques for software modularity related to the above research topic.
Interested candidates for both positions are invited to send a detailed CV via email to Hidehiko Masuhara (masuhara@acm.org). Please note that the deadline for the application to the PhD student is approaching soon.
Dr. Kazuaki Ishizaki from IBM Rsearch Tokyo gives a talk on Extending a Statically Typed Language JIT Compiler for Dynamic Scripting Languages. Visit the department’s page for details.
A poster “COSE: a software development methodology for modularizing context-dependent behavior”, authored by Tetsuo Kamina, Tomoyuki Aotani, Hidehiko Masuhara and Tetsuo Tamai, will be presented at at FOSE2013
Our paper “Mapping Context-Dependent Requirements to Event-Based Context-Oriented Programs for Modularity”, authored by Tetsuo Kamina, Tomoyuki Aotani and Hidehiko Masuhara, will be presented at REM 2013.
A poster on “An Analysis of School Bullying Using Multi-Agent Simulation” authored by Masahiro Inohana, Kazunori Seki, and Hidehiko Masuhara, is presented at Joint Agent Workshop and Symposium (JAWS) 2013. This presentation is based on a Bachelor’s Thesis II in 2012 at Department General Systems Studies, College of Arts and Sciences, the University of Tokyo.
A poster on “A Safe Domain Specific Language for OCaml Shell Programming”, authored by Asakura, Masuhara, and Aotani has been presented in JSSST’13.