Raghu Ramakrishnan

Research Area: Community Systems
Location: Yahoo! Research Silicon Valley

Profile

Raghu Ramakrishnan is Chief Scientist for Audience, and Research Fellow at Yahoo! Research, where he heads the Community Systems group.

He has been Professor of Computer Sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and was founder and CTO of QUIQ, a company that pioneered question-answering communities, powering Ask Jeeves' AnswerPoint as well as customer-support for companies such as Compaq.

His research is in the area of database systems, with a focus on data mining, online communities, and web-scale data management.

He has developed scalable algorithms for clustering, decision-tree construction, and itemset counting, and was among the first to investigate mining of continuously evolving, stream data.

His work on query optimization and deductive databases has found its way into commercial database systems, and his work on extending SQL to deal with queries over sequences has influenced the design of window functions in SQL:1999.

His paper on the Birch clustering algorithm received the SIGMOD 10-Year Test-of-Time award, and he has written the widely-used text "Database Management Systems" (WCB / McGraw-Hill, with J. Gehrke), now in its third edition.

He is Chair of ACM SIGMOD, on the Board of Directors of ACM SIGKDD and the Board of Trustees of the VLDB Endowment, and has served as editor-in-chief of the Journal of Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery, associate editor of ACM Transactions on Database Systems, and the Database area editor of the Journal of Logic Programming.

Raghu is a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), and has received several awards, including a Distinguished Alumnus Award from IIT Madras, a Packard Foundation Fellowship, an NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award, and an ACM SIGMOD Contributions Award.

Recent Publications, Projects and News

  • PNUTS - Platform for Nimble Universal Table Storage - During brainstorming sessions with colleagues Philip Bohannon and Brian Cooper, Ramakrishnan wondered whether they could design a simpler...
  • Building Better Online Communities - The Web is teeming with communities, each with its own set of interests and personalities. There are communities for video game addicts, tennis enthusiasts, academic researchers, and coin collectors, to name just a few.
  • Milestone Week in Evolving History of Data-Intensive Computing - The last week of March 2008 saw the emergence of a significant new era in the world of data-intensive scalable computing. Co-sponsored by the Computing Community Consortium (CCC) and Yahoo!, the first-ever Hadoop Summit took place on March 25 in Santa Clara, followed by the first Data-Intensive Computing Symposium on March 26 at Yahoo!’s Sunnyvale headquarters.
  • Yahoo! Researchers Awarded Top Honors in Computer Science and Information Technology from ACM and IEEE - Yahoo! announced that three world-renowned scientists from Yahoo! Research have been recognized for their achievements in fields key to developing the next-generation of Internet experiences, including computer science, artificial intelligence, data mining, and algorithm engineering.
  • Yahoo! Research Celebrates Chile Opening - Yahoo! Research inaugurated a research center at the University of Chile, Santiago on Friday, November 3.
  • Very Large Turnout for VLDB 2006 - “The Country of Morning Calm” served as the majestic location for the 32nd International Conference on Very Large Databases, held September 12 to 15 in Seoul, Korea.
  • Yahoo! Researcher Stands the "Test-of-Time" at ACM SIGMOD/PODS 2006 - The windy city of Chicago served as the backdrop for ACM SIGMOD/PODS 2006, one of the largest database conferences of the year held from June 26th to 30th. Yahoo! Research had a substantial presence, with Yahoo! researchers making several presentations.