Lixia Zhang

Lixia Zhang (Chinese: 张丽霞)[1] is the Jonathan B. Postel Professor of Computer Science at the University of California, Los Angeles.[2] Her expertise is in computer networks; she helped found the Internet Engineering Task Force, designed the Resource Reservation Protocol,[3] coined the term "middlebox",[2][4] and pioneered the development of named data networking.[5]

Lixia Zhang
张丽霞
Born
China
EducationCalifornia State University, Los Angeles
Alma materMassachusetts Institute of Technology
Known forResource Reservation Protocol
Middlebox
Scientific career
FieldsComputer networks
InstitutionsUniversity of California, Los Angeles
Doctoral advisorDavid D. Clark

Biography

Zhang grew up in northern China, where she worked as a tractor driver on a farm when the Cultural Revolution closed the schools.[6] She earned a master's degree in electrical engineering in 1981 at California State University, Los Angeles,[6] and completed her doctorate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1989, under the supervision of David D. Clark.[7] After working as a researcher at Xerox PARC, she moved to UCLA in 1996.[6]

She and her husband, Jim Ma, have two sons. They reside in Sherman Oaks.[6]

Contributions

Zhang was one of the 21 participants in the initial meeting of the Internet Engineering Task Force, in 1986, the only woman and the only student at the meeting. In the IETF, her initial work concerned routing, although her thesis research was instead on quality of service.[3] She was also a member of the Internet Architecture Board, from 1994 to 1996 and again from 2005 to 2009.[8]

A protocol she designed for changing the settings in an experimental network setup became the basis for the Resource Reservation Protocol.[3] Zhang's paper on the protocol, "RSVP: A New Resource ReSerVation Protocol" (with Steve Deering, Deborah Estrin, Scott Shenker, and Daniel Zappala, IEEE Network 1993) was selected in 2002 as one of ten landmark articles reprinted with commentary in the 50th-anniversary issue of IEEE Communications Magazine.[9]

In 1999[2] Zhang coined the term "middlebox" to refer to a computer networking device that performs functions other than that of a regular Internet protocol router.[4] Examples of middleboxes include firewalls and network address translators. Her term has been widely adopted by the industry.[2]

Beginning in 2010 she has been the leader of a multi-campus research project concerning named data networking.[5]

Awards and honors

In 2006, Zhang became a Fellow of both the Association for Computing Machinery and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.[10][11] In 2009 she won the IEEE Internet Award.[12] She was named to the Postel Professorship in 2012.[2] In 2014, her picture appeared on the four of diamonds in a pack of playing cards featuring 54 notable women in technology.[13]

Zhang is featured in the Notable Women in Computing cards.[14]

References

  1. "中心老师参加第三届北大-UCLA学术年会". Peking University (in Chinese). 2012-06-27. Retrieved 2018-10-15.
  2. Kromhout, Wileen Wong (February 2, 2012), "Lixia Zhang named to UCLA's Jonathan B. Postel Chair in Computer Science", UCLA Newsroom, archived from the original on April 25, 2019, retrieved 2015-06-14.
  3. "Interview with Lixia Zhang, Professor, Computer Science Department, UCLA, Member of the IAB", IETF Journal, Spring 2006, archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  4. Carpenter, B.; Brim, S. (February 2002), Middleboxes: Taxonomy and Issues, Request for Comments, 3234, Internet Society
  5. Named Data Networking: First Phase Participants. Retrieved 2015-06-14.
  6. McCluskey, Eileen (October 20, 2009), "Lixia Zhang, PhD '89: Researcher played key role in developing Internet architecture", MIT Technology Review, retrieved 2015-06-14.
  7. Lixia Zhang at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  8. IAB History. Retrieved 2015-06-14.
  9. Landmark 10 articles: RSVP: A New Resource ReSerVation Protocol. Archived from the original April 14, 2005. Retrieved 2015-06-14.
  10. ACM Fellow award citation. Retrieved 2015-06-14.
  11. IEEE Fellows Elected as of January 1, 2006 Archived March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, IEEE Communications Society. Retrieved 2015-06-14.
  12. IEEE Internet Award recipients. Retrieved 2015-06-14.
  13. Bort, Julie (February 12, 2015), "54 women who rocked the tech world", Business Insider.
  14. "Notable Women in Computing".
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