SRU computer science professor awarded a BSSw Fellowship

Share

Professor making a presentation

Nitin Sukhija, a Slippery Rock University associate professor of computer science, is among selected national leaders and advocates of high-quality scientific software who was awarded a Better Scientific Software Fellowship.

Jan. 27, 2022

SLIPPERY ROCK, Pa. — Nitin Sukhija, a Slippery Rock University associate professor of computer science, is among selected national leaders and advocates of high-quality scientific software who was awarded a Better Scientific Software Fellowship, a program that funds activities that "improve developer productivity and software sustainability of scientific codes."

Sukhija is one of six members of the BSSw Fellowship Class of 2022, which includes leaders in scientific software development from universities, national laboratories and industry. The BSSw Fellowship is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy and National Science Foundation, and fellows are selected based on an application process that includes the proposal of a funded activity that promotes better scientific software. Fellows receive up to $25,000 for activities that include organizing workshops, preparing tutorials or creating content to engage the scientific software community.

"This fellowship will not only allow me to advance my research in securing software and computing systems, but also it will aid multiple research communities to develop more trustworthy and secure scientific software," Sukhija said. "I'm honored to be selected for such a prestigious fellowship and excited about this opportunity."

Sukhija, who is director of SRU's Center for Cybersecurity and Advanced Computing, will work to help practitioners mitigate the risk of software vulnerabilities with best practices and tools for secure scientific software development. He will create a one-day workshop on securing scientific software development. The workshop will be conducted both virtually and in-person, and will provide attendees guidance for evaluating design practices for creating secure software, software processes for managing secure software, threat modeling, and quality assurance testing using both static and dynamic analysis tools.

The BSSw website provides a central hub for the scientific software community to address pressing challenges in software productivity, quality and sustainability.

Sukhija will be recognized with the other 2022 BSSw Fellows at the Exascale Computing Project Annual Meeting, May 2-5 in Kansas City.

More information is available on the BSSw website. Learn more about SRU's C2AC at sru.edu/c2ac.

MEDIA CONTACT: Justin Zackal | 724.738.4854 |  justin.zackal@sru.edu