David R. Cheriton Faculty Fellowships in Computer Science

The David R. Cheriton Faculty Fellowships are a prestigious recognition. The awards support the work of leading faculty in computer science with an emphasis on supporting research that addresses problems associated with designing and implementing efficient and reliable computing systems, along with their effective integration.

These fellowships help the University of Waterloo and the David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science continue their innovations in information technology teaching and research.

Current Cheriton Faculty Fellows

2024–2027

Lila Kari

Lila Kari

Lila Kari is Professor in the Cheriton School of Computer Science, where she moved from her previously held position in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Western Ontario (1993-2017). She received her M.Sc. in 1987 from the University of Bucharest, Romania, and her Ph.D. in 1991 for her thesis “On Insertions and Deletions in Formal Languages,” for which she received the Rolf Nevanlinna doctoral thesis award for the best doctoral thesis in mathematics thesis in Finland.

Author of more than 250 peer reviewed articles, Professor Kari is a recognized expert in the area of biomolecular computation, that is using biological, chemical and other natural systems to perform computations. In 2015 she received the Rozenberg Tulip Award for the DNA Computer Scientist of the Year, awarded at the 21st International conference on DNA Computing and Molecular Programming, Harvard University, USA , for her contributions in advancing formal theoretical models and exemplary leadership in the field. The award is presented by the International Society for Nanoscale Science, Computation and Engineering, ISNSCE, annually and recognizes a prominent scientist who has shown continuous contributions, pioneering, original contributions, and who has influenced the development of the field.

She is Editor-in-Chief of the journal Theoretical Computer Science-C (theory of natural computing), as well as Editor-in-Chief of the Springer Natural Computing Series. She has served as Steering Committee Chair for the DNA Computing and Molecular Programming conference series, as Steering Committee member for the Unconventional Computation and Natural Computation conference series, as well as on the Scientific Advisory Committee of the International Society for Nanoscale Science, Computation, and EngineeringShe serves on the editorial board of the journal Natural Computing and Journal of Universal Computer Science, on the advisory board for the EATCS-Springer series Monographs in Theoretical Computer Science and Texts in Theoretical Computer Science, and was section editor for the Handbook of Natural Computing (Springer Verlag, 2012).

She has additionally served as a member of the Board of Directors of the FIELDS Institute for Research in Mathematical Sciences, the UK EPSRC Peer Review College, on the NSERC Grant Selection Committee on Computing and Information Systems, the NSERC Herzberg-Brockhouse-Polanyi Prize joint selection committee, and NSERC Steacie Memorial Fellowship committee. At the University of Western Ontario she has received several awards, including the Florence Bucke Science Prize, the Faculty of Science Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, and Canada Research Chair in Biocomputing (2002–2006, and again in 2007–2011). At the University of Waterloo she received the School of Computer Science Outstanding Performance Award in 2018, and was University Research Chair from 2017 to 2023. Her current research focuses on comparative genomics, biodiversity informatics, as well as theoretical aspects of bioinformation and biocomputation.

Florian Kerschbaum

Florian Kerschbaum

Florian Kerschbaum is a Professor in the Cheriton School of Computer Science (joined in 2017), a member of the CrySP group, and the NSERC/RBC Research Chair in Data Security since 2019. Previously, he worked as chief research expert at SAP in Karlsruhe (2005–2016) and as a software architect at Arxan Technologies in San Francisco (2002–2004). 

He holds a Ph.D. in computer science from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (2010) and a master’s degree from Purdue University (2000). Professor Kerschbaum served as the inaugural director of the Waterloo Cybersecurity and Privacy Institute from 2018 to 2021. He is an ACM Distinguished Scientist (2019), a winner of the Outstanding Young Computer Science Researcher Award from CS-Can/Info-Can (2019) and a winner of the Faculty of Math Golden Jubilee Research Excellence Award (2022).

He is interested in security and privacy in the entire data science lifecycle. He extends real-world systems with cryptographic security mechanisms to achieve (some) provable security guarantees. His  work is used in several business applications.


 


2023–2026

Khuzaima Daudjee

photo of Khuzaima Daudjee

Khuzaima Daudjee is a Research Associate Professor at the Cheriton School of Computer Science. He designs and develops systems that store and manage data. His research thrusts are large-scale data management, storage, and provision of systems-level support for applications such as streaming, graph processing and machine learning.

Khuzaima’s work has been recognized with several awards, among them two SIGMOD Best Demonstration Awards (2020 and 2021) and an ACM Symposium on Cloud Computing Best Paper Award. He has served as Associate Editor of PVLDB, SIGMOD, ICDE, IEEE Transactions on Data and Knowledge Engineering, Distributed and Parallel Databases, and Information Systems. In recognition of his outstanding contribution to computer science, Khuzaima has been named an ACM Distinguished Scientist.



 



Toshiya Hachisuka

Professor Toshiya Hachisuka

Toshiya Hachisuka is an Associate Professor at the Cheriton School of Computer Science, affiliated with three research groups: Computer Graphics, Scientific Computation, and Computational Mathematics

His research focuses on the numerical and mathematical aspects of light transport simulation for realistic image synthesis. By combining applied mathematics, computer science, and physics, he has been working on various problems related to visual simulation of objects.

Before joining the University of Waterloo in 2020, he worked as an Associate Professor at the University of Tokyo and an Assistant Professor at Aarhus University. He received a PhD from the University of California, San Diego. 
 



 



2022–2025

Eric Blais

photo of Professor Eric Blais

Eric Blais is an Associate Professor in the Algorithms and Complexity Theory group within the Cheriton School of Computer Science. His research interests span theoretical computer science with special focus on sublinear-time algorithms, randomness in computation, and complexity theory. 

His recent achievements include being the recipient of a prestigious best paper award at FOCS 2020 for work with his colleague Professor Shalev Ben-David that extended Yao’s minimax theorem. In 2021, Professor Blais received an Ontario Early Researcher Award to develop new theoretical foundations for sublinear-time algorithms.

He has a PhD from Carnegie Mellon University and was a Simons Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow at MIT from 2012–14.






Semih Salihoğlu

photo of Professor Semih Salihoğlu

Semih Salihoğlu is an Associate Professor at the Cheriton School of Computer Science. His research focuses on graph databases, distributed systems for processing graphs, and algorithms and theories for evaluation of database queries. His systems work focuses on developing systems for managing, querying, or doing analytics on graph-structured data. He has co-architected and co-developed several graph data management, processing, visualizing, and debugging systems.

Some of his most notable systems include the GraphflowDB graph database management system and the GPS graph processing system. He has served as the PC co-chair for SIGMOD’s demonstration track and co-chaired the GRADES-NDA workshop, the premier workshop on graph data management, and serves on its steering committee. He has a PhD from Stanford and is a recipient of several paper awards, among them a 2018 VLDB Best Paper Award, a 2022 ACM SIGMOD Research Highlight Award, and a Best Experiment, Analysis and Benchmark Paper Award at VLDB 2022.






 


Previous Cheriton Faculty Fellows

Cheriton Faculty Fellows Year
Jesse Hoey, M. Tamer Özsu 2021–24
Christopher Batty, Yaoliang Yu 2020–23
Lap Chi Lau, Daniel Vogel 2019–22
Edward Lank, M. Tamer Özsu 2018–21
Urs Hengartner, Bernard Wong 2017–20
Tim Brecht, Charles Clarke 2016–19
Dan Brown, Pascal Poupart 2015–18
Michael Godfrey, Jesse Hoey 2014–17
Ihab Ilyas, M. Tamer Öszu 2013–16 
Raouf Boutaba, Kate Larson 2012–15 
Gladimir Baranoski, Peter Forsyth 2011–14     
Robin Cohen, Alejandro López-Ortiz 2010–13
Ken Salem, John Watrous 2009–12  
Charles Clarke, Yuying Li 2008–11 
Raouf Boutaba, Frank Tompa 2007–10