April 20, 2023
Associate Professor Hideyuki Kawashima of the Faculty of Environment and Information Studies (left in photo), along with Yushi Ogihara (center in photo), a first-year master's student in the Graduate School of Media and Governance at the time of the award, and Masahide Fukuyama (right in photo), a third-year student in the Faculty of Environment and Information Studies at the time of the award, both from the Hideyuki Kawashima Laboratory, each received a "Young Researcher's Award" at the 158th meeting of the Information Processing Society of Japan's Special Interest Group on System Software and Operating System (IPSJ SIGOS).
The Young Researcher's Award is presented to young researchers who have given outstanding presentations at research meetings and symposiums.
[Young Researcher's Award]
"Transactional Design of ROS TF and Timeline Corruption"
Yushi Ogihara, Hideyuki Kawashima, Reio Man, Akihisa Oya (University of Tsukuba)
"Design of a Secure Silo Using SGX"
Masahide Fukuyama, Hideyuki Kawashima, Masahiro Tanaka
Comment from Yushi Ogihara
I am greatly honored to receive such an award. This paper was based on my graduation project, and it is a great encouragement to have my research activities as an undergraduate student recognized. I will continue to engage in research in graduate school that is both interesting and beneficial to the world.
Comment from Masahide Fukuyama
I am extremely honored to have won the Young Researcher's Award. Receiving such recognition, despite having just started my research activities, is a great encouragement. The paper I presented this time is merely the beginning of my research theme, so I will not rest on my laurels and will continue to devote myself to my research.
Comment from Associate Professor Hideyuki Kawashima, Faculty of Environment and Information Studies
I am delighted that Mr. Ogihara and Mr. Fukuyama have received awards at the long-established Special Interest Group on System Software and Operating System. The data infrastructure we are exploring is indispensable in modern society, and exciting research is being actively conducted worldwide.
Mr. Ogihara, with his extraordinary idea of applying transactions—a core technology of databases—to robotics, has dramatically improved its performance and quality. This will make robotics in general, including autonomous driving, safer and more high-performing.
Mr. Fukuyama proposed a data kernel with robust security that can withstand attacks from cloud providers and operating systems. In principle, it offers higher performance than a similar system provided by Microsoft, and what's more, it is open source.
SFC students are extremely talented, and I hope to continue producing such results together with them to make the world a safer and more convenient place.
Source: General Affairs Section, Shonan Fujisawa Campus (SFC) Office