Ruby B. Lee
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Ruby B. Lee
Forrest G. Hamrick Professor in Engineering
Professor of Electrical Engineering
Ph.D. 1980, Stanford University
We are interested in defining new computer architectures for the
Information Age, targeted at emerging information-processing paradigms
rather than existing ones. Our current research focus is on
architecture with integrated optimizations for multimedia
information-processing and secure information-processing.
Computers will soon be everywhere yet invisible. Network-ready,
programmable processors will be in every communications device,
entertainment device, appliance, and computer. Our research involves
defining new processor, platform, and infrastructure architectures for
this broader class of Internet-controllable, programmable information
machines. We strive for highly functional, flexible, and minimalist
architecture.
We expect multimedia information-processing to occupy a very
significant part of the processor's workload, as digital telephones,
televisions, displays, printers, and computers all begin to incorporate
similar programmable processors and platforms. We are interested in
defining the most efficient, innovative instruction-set architecture
techniques for multimedia information-processing, based on
understanding or projecting the needs of present and future multimedia
algorithms. These architectural techniques can be used to define new
blueprints for future media processors, coprocessors, and
multimedia-enhanced microprocessors. Our emphasis is on an integrated
architecture for accelerated processing of all multimedia datatypes,
including images, video, graphics, animation, voice, telephony, music,
and text. We will extend our work in subword-parallel architectures
with general-purpose subword permutation operations, novel multimedia
arithmetic, automatic compilation techniques, and parallel programming
techniques. We are also interested in multimedia content: discovering
"storytelling" techniques that provide content-rich
multimedia information, commensurate with the number of bytes needed
for storage.
Ubiquitous secure information-processing is necessary before we
can truly realize the potential of global internetworking for
e-commerce, e-business, e-publishing, e-training, extranet
collaboration, virtual private networks, and global villages. Our
research involves radical acceleration of software cryptography to
facilitate the widespread adoption of secure information techniques. We
are pursuing integrated encryption techniques that combine privacy and
anonymity concurrently with piracy- and tamper-detection mechanisms.
Our focus includes new technologies for intellectual property
protection of multimedia information disseminated via the Internet. We
are interested in security architectures at the enterprise, platform,
and processor levels.
We would also like to explore improved paradigms of
human-to-human and human-to-information interactions in cyberspace by
working with sociologists, psychologists, philosophers, and economists.
We are especially interested in exploiting the "location
independence" feature provided by cyberspace, to improve the
productivity of team interactions across multiple sites, and the
effectiveness of multimedia training.
Biography: Prior to joining the Princeton faculty in
September 1998, Lee had seventeen years of experience as a practicing
computer architect in processor, multimedia, and security architectures
at Hewlett-Packard, California. She was chief architect of both the
multimedia architecture and security architecture teams. Key technical
contributions include the HP PA-RISC architecture, the first
single-chip CMOS PA-RISC microprocessor, MAX --the first multimedia
instructions for general-purpose processors, the industry's first
software real-time MPEG video decoder product, and the Intel-HP IA-64
EPIC (Explicitly Parallel Instruction Computing) architecture. She also
served as consulting professor of electrical engineering at Stanford
University and holds over 110 U.S. and international patents.
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