Black female computer scientist is recognized with high honors.
By Samara Lynn
Valerie E. Taylor, a computer science professor at Texas A&M, has been named a 2016 Fellow by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).
Taylor is one of 53 ACM members honored for their contributions to computer science. She is being lauded for her “leadership in broadening participation in computing.”
At Texas A&M, Taylor serves as senior associate dean for academic affairs and is a Royce E. Wisenbaker Professor. Her areas of computer science research include high-performance computing as well as performance analysis and modeling of parallel and distributed applications.
Read the rest of the story on Black Enterprise here.
BLACK ENTERPRISE is the premier business, investing, and wealth-building resource for African Americans. Since 1970, BLACK ENTERPRISE has provided essential business information and advice to professionals, corporate executives, entrepreneurs, and decision makers.
Related Posts
Think there aren’t enough women in tech? You should see sports tech. One woman has a formula to fix the problem.
Because AI and robotics are going to have an outsized influence on all our lives, and because the next big thing won’t come out of a bootcamp but a lab, Kelly Coyne and Jennifer Gill Roberts are raising $30 million to invest in tech companies.
This entrepreneur is grateful for all the time she spent working within a large manufacturing company before she launched out on her own.
Women continue to be on the rise in the blockchain field, so we took to showcasing some of the most prominent figures.
She was aimed straight for Broadway, but now she’s running a company with $25 million in funding instead. How did that happen?
A conversation with Zinc CEO Stacey Epstein includes her insights into how men communicate vs. how women communicate, the importance of relationships in fundraising, and the thought-bubble that’s holding the tech industry back.
CTO of Bosch startup Mayfield Robotics Kaijen Hsiao talks about her company’s home robot Kuri, a friendly, adorable robot that does not vacuum.
She launched Women Who Code to change perceptions, support women who were already working in the industry, and pave the way for future women in tech. Here’s what Alaina Percival says today about her nonprofit and women in tech today.
Intel is on the right track, but still did not make any significant progress in hiring minorities last year.
The founder of the Atlanta-based organization digitalundivided and creator of the BIG Innovation Center explains how people of color can achieve economic parity via the tech industry.