Professor Mark J. Clement
Mark J. Clement, Ph.D. is Associate Professor, Networked Computing
Laboratory
Computer Science Department,
Brigham Young University.
His research areas include high performance networks and computing
platforms. He is currently working with AT&T on research to utilize
Internet backbone links more effectively. Research into router security
also promises to protect Internet resources from attacks.
Mark has also
been a Principle Investigator on the DOGMA system which allows clusters
of workstations, supercomputers, and idle desktop machines to
participate
in solving difficult computational problems. He has been involved in
Phylogenetic Analysis (determining evolutionary histories through the
examination of DNA) which requires extensive network and computational
resources.
He
coauthored
Analytical Performance Prediction on Multicomputers,
Network Performance Modeling for PVM Clusters,
Multivariate Statistical Techniques for Parallel Performance
Prediction,
Using Analytical Performance Prediction for Architectural
Scaling,
Dynamic Performance Prediction for Scalable Parallel
Computing,
Overlapping Computations and I/O in Parallel Sorting,
Automated Performance Prediction for Scalable Parallel
Computing,
The YGuard access control model: set-based access control,
Preemption Based Backfill, and
Medium Grain Size Applications on Distributed Memory
Multicomputers.
Mark earned his B.S. in Electrical Engineering at Brigham Young
University in 1985, his M.S. in Electrical Engineering at Brigham Young
University in 1989 with his research on the effects of multilevel cache
parameters
on system performance, and his Ph.D. in Computer Science at Oregon
State University in 1994 with the dissertation
“Analytical Performance Prediction of Parallel Programs”.