
Biography
Anne Bracy is a Senior Lecturer in Cornell Electrical and Computer Engineering. She obtained a B.S. in symbolic systems and an M.S. in computer science from Stanford University and a Ph.D. in computer science at the University of Pennsylvania.
Dr. Bracy has 15 years of experience teaching introductory programming, systems programming, computer architecture and digital logic. Prior to her arrival at Cornell, she was a Principal Lecturer at Washington University in St. Louis. She was also a Research Scientist at the Microarchitecture Research Lab at Intel Labs in Santa Clara, California. She is a Senior Member of IEEE, a member of the Faculty Board of WICC, was a 2016 participant of the Faculty Institute for Diversity, and is the faculty advisor for Cornell Mundial FC.
Select Publications
-
Hilton, Andrew, Anne Bracy. 2015. All of Programming. Electronic textbook on programming, C, and C++.: 700 pages and 7 hours of video content.
-
Sung-Boem, Park, Anne Bracy, Wang Hong, Mitra Subhasish. 2010. “BLoG: Post-Silicon Bug Localization in Processors using Bug Localization Graphs.” Paper presented at 47th Design Automation Conference (DAC), June.
-
Romanescu, Bogdan F., Alvin R. Lebeck, Daniel J. Sorin, Anne Bracy. 2010. “UNified Instruction/Translation/Data (UNITD) Coherence: One Protocol to Rule Them All.” Paper presented at 16th International Symposium on High Performance Computer Architecture (HPCA), January (1st Quarter/Winter).
-
Subramaniam, Samantika, Anne Bracy, Hong Wang, Gabriel H. Loh. “Criticality-Based Optimizations for Efficient Load Processing.” February 2009
-
Bracy, Anne. 2008.“Mini-Graph Processing.” University of Pennsylvania.
Select Awards and Honors
- IEEE Senior Member
- Cornell Engineering Excellence in Teaching Award 2017
- ACSU Faculty Member of the Year 2016
- National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship 2001
- Phi Beta Kappa, Stanford University 2000
Education
- B.A., German Studies, Stanford University 2000
- B.S., Symbolic Systems, Stanford University 2000
- M.S., Computer Science, Stanford University 2001
- Ph.D., Computer and Information Science, University of Pennsylvania 2008