Mary Jane Irwin | |
Nationality: | American |
Alma Mater: | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Memphis State University |
Doctoral Advisor: | James Robertson |
Awards: | ACM Fellow (1996) IEEE Fellow (1995) NAE (2003) |
Field: | Computer Science, Computer Architecture, Electronic Design Automation |
Mary Jane Irwin is an Emerita Evan Pugh Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at Pennsylvania State University. She has been on the faculty at Penn State since 1977. She is an international expert in computer architecture. Her research and teaching interests include computer architecture, embedded and mobile computing systems design, power and reliability aware design, and emerging technologies in computing systems.
Irwin was elected a member of the National Academy of Engineering in 2003 for contributions to VLSI architecture and automated design.
Mary Jane Irwin received her B.S. in Mathematics from Memphis State University in 1971, and her M.S. and Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Illinois in 1975 and 1977, respectively. Her dissertation research on the topic of computer arithmetic was supervised by Dr. James Robertson.
Mary Jane Irwin joined the faculty of the Pennsylvania State University as an assistant professor in 1977. She was promoted to the rank of full professor in 1989. She retired in 2017.
Irwin has worked in the area of application-specificarchitectures, including the design, implementation, and field-testing of three different board level designs---the Arithmetic Cube, the MGAP and SPARTA. With her studentRobert M. Owens they developed a suite of architecture, logic and circuit designtools including ARTIST, PERFLEX, LOGICIAN, and DECOMPOSER.
In late 1993, Irwin worked in the area of resource constrained systems design including embedded systems that have limited battery life and limited memory space and sensor network systems that have extremely limited resources. With colleagues she developed an architectural level power simulator, SimplePower.
Irwin's recent work is in mixed technology circuits.
On October 1, 2019 the IEEE CEDA and ESD Alliance announced that Mary Jane Irwin will receive the 2019 Phil Kaufman Award, the EDA Industry's highest honor. She will be the first woman to receive the award.[1]
Irwin has extensive service to the Computer Science research community. She is a member of the Board on Army Science and Technology, of ACM's Fellows Selection Committee, of Microsoft Research's External Research Advisory Board, and of NAE's Committee on Membership (Chair for the Class of 2012). Previously she served as a founding co-Editor-in-Chief of ACM's Journal on Emerging Technologies in Computing Systems and as Editor-in-Chief of ACM's Transactions on the Design Automation of Electronic Systems, as an elected member of the CRA's Board of Directors, of the IEEE Computer Society's Board of Governors, of ACM's Council, and as Vice President of ACM. She was also a long-time board member of CRA-W, the CRA's Committee on the Status of Women, where she is now a member emerita.
Mary Jane Irwin was married in July 1966. She and her husband of 55 years have one son, John, who is also a computer scientist, and two grandchildren, Kai and Milo.