• Kang Receives SIGSOFT Early Career Researcher Award By Adam Kohlhaas Eunsuk Kang, an associate professor in Carnegie Mellon University’s Software and Societal Systems Department, has received theACM SIGSOFT Early Career Research Awardfor contributions to improving the safety and robustness of software and AI-enabled systems through software design, formal methods and self-adaptation. • Kang’s work centers on understanding how complex software systems behave under uncertainty, with a focus on building software that is resilient to environmental disturbance and change. • His work has advanced techniques for analyzing and engineering complex systems - particularly those that are safety-critical or integrate AI components - and has helped developers design, implement and deploy more dependable software. • The Early Career Research Award recognizes outstanding research contributions by investigators early in their careers and is presented annually byACM SIGSOFT, the Association for Computing Machinery’s Special Interest Group on Software Engineering. • For more information about the award, visit theSIGSOFT website. • Associate Professor Eunsuk Kang has received the ACM SIGSOFT Early Career Research Awardfor contributions to improving the safety and robustness of software and AI-enabled systems through software design, formal methods and self-adaptation.
Article Summaries:
- Eunsuk Kang, an associate professor in Carnegie Mellon University’s Software and Societal Systems Department, was honored with the ACM SIGSOFT Early Career Research Award. The award recognizes his work on enhancing the safety and robustness of software and AI‑enabled systems through advanced design, formal methods, and self‑adaptation techniques. Kang’s research focuses on how complex software behaves under uncertainty, aiming to build systems that remain resilient to environmental disturbances and change-particularly in safety‑critical and AI‑integrated contexts. The award, presented annually by ACM SIGSOFT, celebrates outstanding early‑career contributions to software engineering.
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