acm's women in computing
Celebrating, Informing and Supporting Women in Computing

ACM-W Athena Lectures

Athena is the Greek goddess of wisdom; with her wisdom and sense of purpose, and her willingness to enter the fray, Athena epitomizes the strength, determination, and intelligence of the "Athena Lecturers".   


Athena Lectures celebrate outstanding women researchers who have made fundamental contributions to computer science. Each year ACM will honor a preeminent woman computer scientist as the Athena Lecturer. Speakers are nominated by SIG officers. The Athena Lecturer will give a one-hour invited talk at an ACM conference determined by the speaker and the SIG which nominated her. A video of the talk will appear on the ACM website. The award includes travel expenses to the meeting and a $10000 honorarium. Financial support for the 2008-2009 through 2014-2015 Athena Lecturers, is being provided by Google.
 

  • Athena Lecturers must be nominated by a SIG. To nominate a speaker in the SIGs research areas, an officer of the SIG must fill out the form; three letters of reference are also requested. All SIGs are eligible to nominate up to two candidates, and the SIG is strongly advised not to inform the nominee of the nomination.
    Note: Members of the Athena Lecturer Selection Committee cannot be nominated to be an Athena Lecturer.
  • The chosen speaker will give an invited lecture at an ACM-sponsored meeting determined by the lecturer and the SIG. (It is expected that the talk will be at one of the conferences run by the nominating SIG.) ACM will cover travel expenses and honorarium.
  • The Athena Lecturer selection committee recognizes that in some fields, senior women researchers are rare and thus the committee promotes flexible arrangements, e.g., a SIG may chose to invite an outstanding woman researcher in a related area to give a keynote (for example, a usability speaker at a security meeting). In addition, two SIGs may choose to collaborate and invite a speaker to give keynotes at two meetings during the year, one in each SIG's research area. It will the Athena Lecturer's choice as to whether to do one or two Athena Lectures (and if one, which one). In any case, the two SIGs must themselves provide the additional travel funding for the second conference.
  • Deadlines: Applications due: February 1 2013. Announcement of Athena Lecturer: March 2013. Lecture will occur: Between July 1, 2013 and June 30, 2015.
  • 2013 Selection Committee:  Mary Jane Irwin, PSU, Chair, 2012-2014; Susan Graham, UCB, 2009-2013; Laura Haas, IBM, 2011-2013;  Judith Olson, UCI, 2013-2015; Eva Tardos, Cornell, 2008-2013; Pamela Zave, AT&T Research, 2012-2014.

 



 

Nominate a Speaker for 2013-2014
(nominations now closed)

 

Athena Lecturers

 

Katherine Yelick
2013-2014 Athena Lecturer
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, University of California, Berkeley
will speak at the SC 2013 conference.

Nancy Lynch
2012-2013 Athena Lecturer
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
will speak at the 2013 PODC conference.

Judith S. Olson
2011-2012 Athena Lecturer
University of California, Irvine
spoke at the 2012 CSCW conference.

Mary Jane Irwin 
2010-2011 Athena Lecturer
Pennsylvania State University
spoke at the 2010 ISCA conference.

Susan Eggers
2009-2010 Athena Lecturer
University of Washington
spoke at the 2010 PLDI conference. 

Shafi Goldwasser
2008-2009 Athena Lecturer
MIT and Weizmann Institute of Science, spoke at STOC 2009

Karen Spärck Jones
2007-2008 Athena Lecturer
Cambridge University
passed away on April 4, 2007
spoke at the 30th Annual International ACM SIGIR Conference

Deborah Estrin
2006-2007 (inaugural)
Athena Lecture UCLA spoke at MobiCom 2006