Published several papers such as 'Transactional Concurrency Control for Intermittent, Energy-Harvesting Computing Systems' (PLDI 2019) and 'A Reconfigurable Energy Storage Architecture for Energy-Harvesting Devices' (ASPLOS 2018), which won Best Paper and IEEE MICRO Top Picks Honorable Mention 2019.
Research Experience
Involved in multiple projects including Tartan-Artibeus-1: A Batteryless Satellite, where she designed and built a solar-powered, batteryless PocketQube satellite; and professional experience at Arm Research and Northrop Grumman Mission Systems.
Education
Carnegie Mellon University, PhD in Electrical and Computer Engineering, 2016 - Present; Carnegie Mellon University, M.S. in Electrical and Computer Engineering, Awarded May 2019; University of Maryland, College Park, B.S. Electrical Engineering, Minor in Computer Engineering, 2012 - 2016, Magna Cum Laude, with Gemstone Honors Citation.
Background
PhD candidate in the Electrical and Computer Engineering department at CMU and a member of the ABSTRACT research group led by Professor Brandon Lucia. Her primary research studies intermittent computing, which enables tiny, batteryless, energy-harvesting devices to perform computationally intensive tasks despite frequent power failures.