Recent News
New associate dean interested in helping students realize their potential
August 6, 2024
Hand and Machine Lab researchers showcase work at Hawaii conference
June 13, 2024
Two from School of Engineering to receive local 40 Under 40 awards
April 18, 2024
Making waves: Undergraduate combines computer science skills, love of water for summer internship
April 9, 2024
News Archives
[Colloquium] Bias in Computer Systems Experiments
March 2, 2010
- Date: Tuesday, March 2, 2010
- Time: 11 am — 12:15 pm
- Place: Mechanical Engineering, Room 218
Todd Mytkowicz
Dept. of Computer Science
University of Colorado
Abstract: To evaluate an innovation in computer systems a performance analyst measures execution time or other metrics using one or more standard workloads. In short, the analyst runs an experiment. To ensure the experiment is free from error, s/he carefully minimizes the amount of instrumentation, controls the environment in which the measurement takes place, repeats the measurement multiple times, and uses statistical techniques to characterize her/his data. Unfortunately, even with such a responsible approach, the analyst’s experiment may still be misleading because of bias. A biased experiment occurs when one experimental setup—or the environment in which we carry out our measurements—inadvertently favors a particular outcome over others. In this talk, I demonstrate that bias is large enough to mislead systems experiments and common enough that it cannot be ignored by the systems community. I describe tools and methodologies that my co-authors and I developed to mitigate the impact of bias on our experiments. Finally, I conclude with my future plans for research—tools that aid performance analysts in understanding the complex behavior of their systems.
Bio: Todd Mytkowicz recently defended his Ph.D. in Computer Science at the University of Colorado, advised by Amer Diwan and co-advised by Elizabeth Bradley. During his graduate tenure he was lucky enough to intern at both Xerox’ PARC and IBM’s T.J. Watson research lab. He was also a visiting scholar at the University of Lugano, Switzerland. His research interests focus on performance analysis of computer system—specifically, he develops tools that aid programmers in understanding and optimizing their systems.