Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Justice!

Harvard is putting the lectures (and other materials) online for a fantastic course, Justice, taught by Michael Sandel. It's a class on moral reasoning, exactly the sort of thing you'd hope a college freshman or sophomore would take to get them thinking about how to think. For years, it has been one of the most popular courses at Harvard. It is billed as "the first course Harvard has ever made available to everyone, online and on the air." (The lectures will, I understand, also be appearing on public television.)

I can vouch for the class, since I indeed took it as a sophomore, some large number of years ago. I can also vouch for it in that I've watched the first lecture online, and the production quality is extremely high. Funnily enough, the first lecture was exactly as I remember it 20 years ago -- the script hasn't changed that much. (If you watch the lecture, you'll see the examples are quite memorable -- I honestly do remember them from when I took the class. But I won't spoil them for you here.) I'm going to watch all the lectures, and see how the class stands up after all these years. I hope you'll join in for some of the fun.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Blog Posts of the Day

A blog post worth reading is Mihai Patrascu's post on, essentially, coming in second, if only for the chance to play armchair psychologist and try to deconstruct Mihai based on his blog posts. Of particular interest to me was his reaction to being offered a job at UCSD as the second-choice candidate -- an offer which he turned down, and apparently would have taken if offered first.

This is interesting to me because this very issue came up in our last search (which I was leading), where we ended up making 6 offers (and got 3 acceptances). We (the hiring committee) recognized that we were making a rather significant request to have 6 simultaneous outstanding offers. We also recognized the dangers in trying to sequentialize these offers. First, there was the internal danger -- the complex discussions (we had such a great committee, we wouldn't have argued) we would have had to undertake to rank-order everyone we wanted to make an offer to. And second, there's the external danger that the candidate -- who will, of course, find out they were the "second choice" -- takes the ordering as a negative signal and becomes more inclined to take another offer. One can argue whether or not a candidate should take such an ordering as a signal, or whether such a reaction is a purely emotional response. (See Mihai's post, for example, and judge for yourself in that case.) But it was clear to us that, even if no such signal was intended, there was a high risk that would be the interpretation from the standpoint of the candidate.

Mihai's post provides a solid empirical data point that we were right to have this concern; it's something I will keep in mind (and if necessary point to) in future hiring discussions. I'm glad we were able to make 6 simultaneous offers, and give all of the candidates we made offers to the right signal.

Something not worth reading is Kevin Carey's article in the Chronicle of Higher Education, where he seems to be saying that Harvard should be doing more for undergraduates and in particular admitting more undergraduate students. It's so bad, I can't bring myself to link to it. Without judging the point of criticism, I've pointed out that his rant is pretty much devoid of an actual argument; if you care (and really, I'd suggest reading Mihai's stuff first!), you can see that I'm somehow now embroiled in an argument with him here and here.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

UC President Interview

Luca Trevisan points to this NY Times Magazine interview with UC president Mark Yudof. Is it just me, or is this guy just completely tone deaf to the current situation in the UC system? If I were a faculty member, or student, in the UC system, this would do the opposite of inspire me. (I checked with my wife, as I often do in such situations, to check my reading -- she had a similar reaction to the piece.) In fact, I'm trying to think of the last time I heard of an administrator that seemed so out of touch... oh, wait, that's right, I can think of that...

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Extending the Sketching of Sketches Result

I'm putting online a paper with Zhenming Liu and Kai-Min Chung (both graduate students at Harvard) that extends one of the results from Declaring Independence via the Sketching of Sketches by Indyk and McGregor (SODA 2008).

They consider a model where a stream of pairs (i,j) in [n]^2 arrive, giving a joint distribution (X,Y), and the goal is to determine how close the joint distribution is to the product of the marginal distributions under various metrics, which naturally corresponds to how close X and Y are to being independent. All the normal goals in the streaming setting hold (small space, small computation per new pair, one or small number of passes, etc.). We extended one of their main results to higher dimensions (a problem they had left open) : the stream is now k-dimensional vectors in [n]^k, and we wish to approximate the L_2 distance between the joint distribution and the product of the marginal distributions in a single pass. We give a randomized algorithm that is a (1 plus-minus epsilon) approximation (with probability 1-\delta) that requires space logarithmic in n and the stream size m and proportional to 3^k. The paper should be of interest to those who know and like the original Indyk/McGregor paper, which I assume is a signficant part of the streaming community.

The Indyk/McGregor proof required a clever application of the Arithmetic Mean-Geometric Mean inequality. To move the proof up into higher dimensions, we end up having to use the AM-GM inequality twice, along with a clever partitioning of the objects (edges in [n]^k) to get the right constant factor 3^k out. It also seems that this is the "right" dependence on k, at least for this algorithmic approach. (A previous result by Braverman/Ostrovsky also tackled this problem, but had a 2^O(k^2) dependence on k.)

We submitted this to SODA, where it didn't get in, but seemed to be on the borderline. The reviews were on the whole quite reasonable. My take is that in this paper, we (by which, of course, one should read "Kai-Min and Zhenming") took a nice previous SODA result, presented a non-trivial extension, and really wrote it up very clearly and nicely -- I'd like to think we really clearly explained the essence of the argument and why it works. The reviewers, I think, recognized this, but on the other hand had to deal with the issue that it was just a single result. The original paper had more results, and, at the risk (or hope) of instigating commentary, I'll suggest that SODA as a whole is more interested in quantity over writing quality ; a hodgepodge of lemmas and theorems stands a better chance of getting in than a single well-written idea. (The original Indyk/McGregor paper, I should be clear, both has a number of results and excellent ideas, and is not what I'm referring to in this statement.) I understood going in that this would probably be borderline for SODA; I had hoped it would make it in, but this is certainly not a case where I would complain about the decision or the review content by the PC. (One might argue that perhaps SODA should take more papers, and in particular seek out more papers of this type, but that's a different, higher-level argument.)

There are other conferences we could submit to, but the conferences with upcoming deadlines didn't seem particularly suitable. (In particular, they weren't in the US, and would require either extensive travel for me, or visa issues for the students.) Since the result seemed to us essentially done as it was, we're submitting to a journal. But it's available now for anyone who is interested.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Not Teaching / Double Teaching

Last semester, for various reasons, I ended up "double-teaching", offering both my undergraduate algorithms class and my graduate network algorithms class. The disadvantage of double-teaching is that it take a lot of time and, in my experience, is very tiring -- especially when you teach the classes back-to-back, as I did. It's not apparently recommended practice here, as there's a clear preference for teaching one class a semester. I can certainly see why -- it's good to have reasons for faculty to come in and interact, both with students and other faculty, and a class is an anchor for all sorts of interaction. But a lot of our faculty were on sabbatical in the spring last year, so I was able to do it.

The reward for the work last semester is that I'm not teaching this semester. I still find I'm coming in, in part because there's a lot of administrative things that have to get done (especially the first few weeks of the semester), and in part because it's often not productive to work at home with a small toddler there. But I'm enjoying having the time available that comes from not having to teach.

The question is what to do with that time. I've had a good research summer, including finishing off a number of journal versions that had been lying around, and I certainly could just keep going forward on a number of research projects. But it feels like I've been given a few months of opportunity, and I should find a way to use it. I have a couple of ideas for books, and I feel like (after I finish off a few more dangling research projects) I should motivate myself to start one of those. I know a book is a big project, so even with this opportunity it will take some mental discipline to get started.

For those who are faculty, what would you do with a semester off of teaching (where you can't go away on sabbatical)? Anyone have any suggestions on what to do with the gift of time?

Friday, September 18, 2009

FOCS Early Registration (A Tale of 3 Web Sites)

I was asked by the powers that be to remind everyone of the early registration deadline for FOCS 2009, which is October 1. Registration and hotel information can be found at the FOCS 2009 site.
Keep in mind there will be a special 50th FOCS Anniversary day on Saturday October 24th with talks by Dick Karp, Mihalis Yannakakis, Noga Alon, and Manuel Blum.

Be careful which FOCS 2009 page you go to. The one that Google brings up first is focs2009.org, which I won't even give a link to, since it's a squatter, which at least is polite enough to point to the Georgia Tech site. The second one Google brings up with the Yale site, which Dan must have set up for submissions, but it's the Georgia Tech site that has all the local arrangements info. Having just chaired I can understand why it's easier on the organization end to have one site maintained by the PC chair and another by local arrangements, but it doesn't seem like the best idea from the attendee end. Ah well, now you know where on the web to go.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Random Musings for the Day

I like Daniel Lemire's post on "the truth" about research grants so much, I'm linking to it.

Richard Lipton is taking bets on whether P = NP; well, not really, but he thinks there are "implicit odd" in how we do research suggesting the "belief" that P = NP is in the 1,000,000 to 1 range, and doesn't see the evidence for it. (I disagree, somewhat, in the comments.)

Harvard's budget cuts have substantially closed our deficit (the "crisis" is a full further year out).

Harvard's Dean of Admissions and Financial aid answers the all-important questions. (Do I have to read now, if my oldest is a decade away from college?)

The unfolding story of the murder of Annie Le (see here if you're not caught up on your news) is disturbing on many levels, but in particular because I don't want science students -- and in particular female science students -- to feel unsafe in their buildings at whatever hours. I haven't heard much in the news reports about how situations like this (where I mean potentially unsafe working conditions such as the need to work in labs late, and -- although we surely don't know the story yet -- the appearance that the murder might have been done by a maladjusted male admirer) might impact people, and especially women, pursuing scientific careers. But the story made me think of it.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

SIGGRAPH article

The "final version" of our SIGGRAPH Asia paper, Real-Time Parallel Hashing on the GPU, is available here.

I was primarily involved in the "hash table construction" part of the paper. The ideas there are familiar in various works (though I don't know of another parallel implementation of cuckoo hashing); the question is how to put pieces together for performance on this architecture. We end up using a 2-level scheme; first hash the items into (1st-level) buckets, with a limited number (512) of items per bucket. Then (2nd level) for each bucket the items are placed in parallel in a cuckoo hash table, using up to 512 thread (one per item) and fast memory for each bucket. Then everything is copied out to global memory. The comparison point, for applications, is sorting/binary search; sorting has been highly optimized for parallel processors. Generally, we come out about even on the construction times, and much better on the lookup times.

The cool stuff is the applications my co-authors tested with the hash table. They use it to compute real-time intersections of surfaces, and for matching of objects (buildings, etc.) to video frames. The accompanying video explains it all better than I could here (picture, thousand words, all that). Since my co-authors did all the work on the applications end, I think I'm allowed to say I'm impressed with the results -- graphics applications just look really great.

The "structure" of the paper reminds me of networking papers I've been involved with. Here's an algorithm/data structure, and here are 1-3 applications to show you what it can really do. This last part is usually a lot of work, since you have to embed the algorithm/data structure into a real system, with many moving parts beyond the algorithm/data structure you're promoting. Getting things to work is always a challenge (which is why simulation is so popular -- and, in many settings, discouraged).

I'm very excited about continuing to do more in this area, and that's due entirely to the amazing abilities of my co-authors: Dan A. Alcantara, Andrei Sharf, Fatemeh Abbasinejad, Shubhabrata Sengupta, John D. Owens, and Nina Amenta.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Colleges, Newspapers

A colleague sent me this link to a Washington Post article, on how colleges are going to be "torn apart" like newspapers have been by the Internet. Dramatically, "The business model that sustained private U.S. colleges cannot survive."

It's not really a new theme, I've been hearing this for a while. I find myself agreeing in spirit -- I know things are going to change dramatically in education. I just find myself skeptical that anyone really knows what the change will end up looking like at this point. Here are the key paragraphs to me:

"When this happens -- be it in 10 years or 20 -- we will see a structural disintegration in the academy akin to that in newspapers now. The typical 2030 faculty will likely be a collection of adjuncts alone in their apartments, using recycled syllabuses and administering multiple-choice tests from afar."

Strangely, this is a fair description of my Harvard Extension School class, which is "recycled" from my regular Harvard class -- the lectures are taped, the assignments are pretty much the same, and the one difference is since I can't have proctored "in-class" exams, I do a multiple-choice exams over the Internet. Eerie. Maybe somebody does know what the change will end up looking like.

"Not all colleges will be similarly affected. Like the New York Times, the elite schools play a unique role in our society, and so they can probably persist with elements of their old revenue model longer than their lesser-known competitors. Schools with state funding will be as immune as their budgets. But within the next 40 years, the majority of brick-and-mortar universities will probably find partnerships with other kinds of services, or close their doors."

It's nice to hear that I'm probably safe. (Harvard's still considered an elite school, even after the endowment drop, right?) I just need the current system to last another 30 years or so. But, as usual, this is something for those starting or thinking about a PhD to ponder...

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Research Labs "vs." Academia

Muthu points to a blog entry (by Danah Boyd of Microsoft Research) on research labs vs. academia. It's a good read -- especially for graduate students thinking about career paths. It got me thinking about the topic as well.

I spent two+ years at Digital Systems Research Center out of graduate school, and I loved it. It was great training (Andrei Broder was, as I always rave, a great mentor to me there, but there were many other more senior scientists there who were very helpful to me as well), it really cemented my interest in connecting systems and theory, and my experience matched, to a great extent, the positives mentioned Danah Boyd's blog entry: freedom to pursue what I wanted, a great density of great people, many chances to interact with students, and so on. All without the hassle of grant-writing.

If I hadn't also liked being a professor, I would have gone back. But I liked being a professor, and ended up staying at Harvard. I don't think I'd say one is better or worse than the other. I think it depends on a lot on the person, and for many people, both are possible answers.

The one looming aspect of the research lab (perhaps underestimated in the linked blog post) is the issue of job security. I moved to Harvard just after Digital got bought my Compaq, later bought by HP, later... well, the Systems Research Center just doesn't exist. Similarly, IBM and AT&T labs have gone through massive changes over the years. Microsoft seems like a safe bet in terms of a stable research lab environment for the next decade or so, but it's hard to prophesize beyond that. Now, the "insecurity" of the corporate environment is maybe not such a big deal -- people from SRC for the most part just moved on to different jobs, at Microsoft or Google or Yahoo or HP or a startup or academia or wherever, and continued to be very successful. But I do know from firsthand and secondhand experience it can be an unpleasant, even if only temporary, external disruption if your company situation changes significantly.

I hadn't thought much of the research lab vs. academia issue much in recent years since as a family we're quite happy in our present location, and Boston hasn't really been a hub for research labs until recently. Now, I suppose, there are more options. While I don't imagine leaving academia any time soon, I have been spending some time this summer at the Microsoft New England lab, and have been really enjoying it. But more on that will be a topic for another post.

Tuesday, September 08, 2009

ESA 2009

ESA is being held at the IT University of Copenhagen. It's a wonderful, fairly new university building, with one strange problem -- a severe shortage of plug outlets. Really, it's like a scavenger hunt to find one. The auditorium has just a couple of outlets oddly placed in the way back -- a far cry from the plug at every desk I'm used to in many newer academic buildings. I guess they don't want people plugged in during big talks here.

ESA is unusual in that it has an Engineering and Applications Track, so you actually see some papers with graphs and numerical results from implementations. I only point this out because I almost collapsed in shock when leafing through the papers I saw some actual performance plots (in algorithms papers????), but then recalled this feature of ESA.

I think there's something at ESA for everyone; sadly, I'm flying back and missing a number of the talks of papers I'd like to see, including some hash-based data structure talks:

Rina Panigrahy and Eric Lehman. 3.5-Way Cuckoo Hashing for the Price of 2

Johannes B Hreinsson, Morten Krøyer and Rasmus Pagh. Storing a Compressed Function with Constant Time Access
Martin Aumüller, Martin Dietzfelbinger and Michael Rink. Experimental variations of a theoretically good retrieval data structure

A paper outside my usual scope that caught my eye:

Erik D. Demaine, MohammadTaghi Hajiaghayi and Dániel Marx. Minimizing Movement: Fixed-Parameter Tractability

Fixed-parameter tractability seems like a great direction for getting efficient algorithms for hard problems; the paper reminds me that I could see adding a lecture on it to my undergraduate algorithms class.

The title that got my attention most was:

Andrew McGregor, Krzysztof Onak and Rina Panigrahy. The Oil Searching Problem


I just wanted to know what the oil searching problem was from the title. It's a competitive ratio/exploration problem generalizing the standard cow-path problem: you've got n wells, each with oil at a different depth, how do you drill to find oil with as little drilling as possible. As the authors point out, this can model research -- you've got n problems that will require different unknown amounts of work to solve....

Award-winning papers are:
Best student paper : Heidi Gebauer. Disproof of the Neighborhood Conjecture with Implications to SAT
Best paper: Christoph Dürr, Flavio Guiñez and Martín Matamala. Reconstructing 3-colored grids from horizontal and vertical projections is NP-hard

Before heading to the airport, I got to see Erik Demaine's talk on Algorithms Meet Art, Puzzles, and Magic. It's an interesting and entertaining talk, though I wish he had a little more time at the end. I recommend it if it comes to a town near you.

On the plus side, ESA still gives out a hefty LNCS paper book, so I'll be able to read about what I miss on the way home, at the cost of dragging some extra heft around various airports.

Monday, September 07, 2009

Controversy at ESA

As you might imagine, there's actually little controversy at ESA. But as I mentioned to some colleagues during the breaks, the only (consistent) way to get comments on a blog is to say controversial things, so that people are annoyed enough to comment. So here are some possibly controversial things, perhaps just a bit tongue-in-cheek, focusing on the business meeting (where I'm typing away now):

1) I was talking with some others this afternoon about awards. Why aren't more conferences giving test of time awards (particularly in theory)? An award for the best paper from 10 years ago at the conference seems like a wonderful thing to have regularly.

Then we started talking about negative awards. Besides giving a best paper award at the conference, what if we gave a worst paper? Funnily enough, it didn't seem like such a negative. "Congratulations, you did just the right amount of work to get your paper over the bubble to get in!" How bad could you feel about that? Perhaps a worst talk award, in contrast, would inspire people to prepare better talks.

2) ESA had issues this year with deadlines -- they had to set their submission deadline a week after ICALP decisions, but still leave enough time for the other associated ALGO workshops to have their deadlines after and satisfy publication constraints for proceedings. This didn't give a lot of time for the PC decisions. I know I had issues chairing STOC as many other conferences tried to set their deadlines after decisions would be announcing.

Why don't we get a unified theory calendar, and have all deadlines preset a year in advance? (This was essentially Thore Husfeldt's idea, if I've interpreted him right.) Stick it on a website/Wiki somewhere, so everyone can see what's going on in advance and plan appropriately? Of course, such advance planning and coordination seems impossible (until we actually get organized and do it).

3) A related issue -- ICALP vs. ESA. Does one dominate the other in your mind? (Because of deadlines, ESA gets and accepts a lot of ICALP rejects.) Maybe we can get a European version of the SODA vs. FOCS/STOC debate going.

4) Amos Fiat, showing the slide at the business meeting on what percentage of papers in each "category" were accepted: "The higher the percentage, the less the PC knew about that topic." Discuss. (Once those SODA reviews come out, you can discuss in that context as well.)

ESA Talk and Paper

Some people have asked me to post my survey/talk at ESA on Open Problems in Cuckoo Hashing. Now that the talk is over, here they are! Here's the paper, and here's the slides (ppt). I apologize in advance for any typos.

One open question that was "solved" between the time from the paper to the talk is that a group of us now have tight bounds on the "thresholds" for cuckoo hashing in the case of 3 or more choices, with 1 bucket per bin. Hopefully we'll have a writeup available soon, but I guess I'm "annoucning" the result.

Friday, September 04, 2009

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

ESA Plans

I'll be headed to ESA this weekend. My talk is first thing Monday morning, so I'll be there sometime Sunday. If anyone wants to get together for dinner Sunday, drop me a line. And if you know any can't-miss dining experiences in Copenhagen, please post it in the comments.

Tuesday, September 01, 2009

ITA, Polaris

At some point, I spent some time at ITA Software, a company I like for many reasons. (First, I like their flight fare-finding and selection interfaces -- which many major airlines and travel sites are based on. I use QPX but now I'll start trying matrix2. I don't want to remember what it was like to find a flight before them. Second, they're local.)

About the time I was there, they were embarking on a new project -- a whole new flight reservation system for Air Canada codenamed Polaris. I wondered what had happened to that project, and when we might see the results. So I was disappointed when news finally came out that from the Air Canada side, the rollout was suspended.

Under the assumption that their tech on this project would be at least a fraction as awesome as their previous systems, and because I'd like local tech companies to do well, I hope they find another customer. If anyone has inside info to post anonymously (hopefully of the form "We're doing just fine, thanks.") please feel free...