About
I’m a Ph.D. student in the Computer Science Department at the University of Texas at Austin. I’m advised by Jovan Stojkovic and Christopher J. Rossbach. My research focuses on computer architecture and operating systems with a focus on datacenter efficiency and hardware acceleration.
I received my Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science and Mathematical Sciences at Carnegie Mellon University, where I was fortunate to be advised by Dimitrios Skarlatos.
Research Interests
My research focuses on datacenter efficiency, broadly in these three categories:
- Computer architecture and hardware-software co-design for datacenters.
- Acceleration of complex problems using heterogeneous architectures.
- Compiler tools that offload resource management and parallel code from programmers.
Datacenters have become the foundation of modern computation, driven by the immense growth of AI and data, but their rapidly growing power demands raise pressing ethical concerns. Architectural advancements promise efficiency, but often struggle to offset the exponential growth in computational workloads - high-performance hardware can increase energy consumption, while specialized accelerators risk under-utilization and resource imbalance. Meanwhile, the complexity of programming such diverse systems often leads to software inefficiencies that further reduce efficiency. My research aims to address these challenges by improving datacenter efficiency through hardware-software co-design, heterogeneous acceleration, and compiler tools that automate resource management and parallelization.
