American computer scientist
Leilani Marie Battle is an American computer scientist. She is an assistant professor at University of Washington's Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering. Leilani Battle is also a co-director in UW's interactive Data Lab program. She is known for her research into the visualization and analysis of complex database systems.[1]
Early life and education
Battle grew up with a love for video games. Because of this she originally chose computer science to become a game designer or a developer.[2] Battle then went to University of Washington and earned her B.S. in computer engineering in 2011.[1] However, when she started doing research internships, instead of pursuing a career in video games, the experience changed her interest in doing research as she enjoyed it.[2]
She then went to Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) where she earned her M.S. in 2013 and Ph.D. in 2017, both in computer science. She also finished a postdoc at the University of Washington's Interactive Data lab in 2017.[1] During her time with MIT and her Ph.D. work, she also helped create ForeCache, a general-purpose program to create time-efficient tools for visualizing large data-sets that interact with Database Management Systems.[3] In 2020, MIT Technology Review lists ForeCache as one of her major contributions when awarding her Innovators Under 35.[3]
Career
Battle was an assistant professor at University of Maryland, College Park, where she led the Battle Data Lab.[2] She is now an assistant professor in University of Washington's Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering where she teaches and mentors students, and conducts research into databases, where she focuses with Human–computer interaction to integrate databases and HCI interfaces to create visualizations for larger databases.[1][2][4]
Awards
In 2020, the MIT Technology Review named Battle one of Innovators Under 35.[5] She won an Adobe Data Science Research Award in 2019 and a VMware Early Career Faculty Grant in 2021.[6][7]
She also received a National Science Foundation CAREER Award[6] and a Sloan Research Fellowship.[8]
References
External links