Biographical Sketch Jeannette M. Wing Jeannette M. Wing is the Executive Vice President for Research and Professor of Computer Science at Columbia University. She joined Columbia in 2017 as the inaugural Avanessians Director of the Data Science Institute. From 2013 to 2017, she was a Corporate Vice President of Microsoft Research. She is Adjunct Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon where she twice served as the Head of the Computer Science Department and had been on the faculty since 1985. From 2007-2010 she was the Assistant Director of the Computer and Information Science and Engineering Directorate at the National Science Foundation. She received her S.B., S.M., and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science, all from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Professor Wing's current research focus is on trustworthy AI. Her general research interests are in the areas of trustworthy computing, security and privacy, specification and verification, concurrent and distributed systems, programming languages, and software engineering. She is known for her work on linearizability, behavioral subtyping, attack graphs, and privacy-compliance checkers. Her 2006 seminal essay, titled "Computational Thinking," is credited with helping to establish the centrality of computer science to problem-solving in fields where previously it had not been embraced. She has published extensively in top journals and major conferences and has given over 300 invited, keynote, and distinguished talks. She was or is on the editorial board of twelve journals, including the Journal of the ACM, the Communications of the ACM, and the Harvard Data Science Review. As Avanessians Director of the Data Science Institute at Columbia, she promoted the ethos of "Data for Good" through DSI's mission: to advance the state-of-the-art in data science; to transform all disciplines, professions, and sectors through the application of data science; and to ensure the responsible use of data to benefit society. She grew the Institute to over 360 faculty affiliates, collaborated with 17 schools, colleges, and institues across the university, and built partnerships with industry, government labs, nonprofis, New York City agencies, and community organizations. She created new research and educational programs to support the inherent multidisciplinary field of data science. As CVP of Microsoft Research, she led all of Microsoft's basic research labs worldwide: Redmond, Cambridge (MA), New York City, Cambridge (UK), and Bangalore. During her first year at Microsoft, she also led the MSR Asia lab in Beijing and MSR Silicon Valley. For MSR, she created the Expeditions program to promote multi-disciplinary collaboration research. She focused research efforts in AI, systems, security, and biology and healthcare. She was instrumental in hiring researchers in economics and social science to Microsoft. With MSR researchers, she worked closely with Azure to bring secure computation to the company's cloud, now called Azure Confidential Computing. She also raised the awareness of privacy-preserving technologies throughout the company. As Microsoft elevated the importance and pervasiveness of AI, she helped senior leadership in its creation of the AI&R division and MSR AI. In her own research, she worked with Microsoft and CMU researchers to build a privacy-compliance checking tool and with Microsoft colleagues on the notion of inverse privacy. At NSF, Wing helped define the Cyber-Enabled Discovey and Innovation Program, bringing computational thinking to all science and engineering disciplines. She created the Expeditions in Computing program for the CISE community; and new programs joint with other directorates in cyber-physical systems, social sciences and computing, economics and computing, health and well-being, and educational technologies. Under her leadership, she created the Computing Community Consortium (CCC) and nurtured the Global Environment for Networking Innovations (GENI) initiative. She worked with other agencies to kickstart national efforts in quantum information science, robotics, and Big Data; and with the K-12 education community, the development of a new Computer Science Advanced Placement course and exam. She introduced the NSF community to cloud computing through joint programs with Google, IBM, and Microsoft. In President Obama's first term, she worked with the administration to help promote broadband access to everyone in the US. While at CMU, she did work jointly with Maurice Herlihy on linearizability, a correctness condition for concurrent objecs; with Barbara Liskov, on a behavioral notion of subtyping; with Oleg Sheyner, on extending standard model checking algorithms to generate attack graphs for discovering security vulnerabilities; and with Anupam Datta and Michael Tshantz on formalzing the notions of use and purpose for privacy policies. She was the Director of the Center for Computational Thinking and the Specification and Verification Center at Carnegie Mellon. She has also directed or co-directed many other research projects: the OASIS Project used model checking and reliability modeling to analyze system survivability; the TinkerTeach Project provided an internationally and widely used type conversion service for Web users; the Calder Project developed a new automated proof technique, called theory generation, for reasoning about security protocols; the Venari Project introduced the idea of using specifications as search keys for object repositories and implemented runtime extensions in Standard ML for concurrent, multi-threaded transactions; the Avalon Project built language extensions to C++ for transaction-based distributed computing; and the Miro Project built tools for the visual specification of file system security. While a graduate student at MIT she was one of the original participants of the Larch Project; her main contribution to Larch has been in the design of Larch interface specification languages. Administratively at Carnegie Mellon, she served as Head of the Computer Science Department, overseeing 90 faculty, from 2004-2007 and 2010-2012. She was Associate Dean for Academic Affairs for five years, overseeing the operations of the educational programs offered by the School of Computer Science, including at the time: ten doctoral programs or specializations, ten master's programs, and the bachelor's program. She also served as Associate Department Head for nine years, running the Ph.D. Program in Computer Science. She is currently a member of the American Academy for Arts and Sciences Board of Directors and Council; Computing Research Association Board; American Association of Universities, Senior Research Officers Steering Committee; the New York State Commission on Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, and Automation; and the Advisory Board for the Association for Women in Mathematics. She has been chair and/or a member of many other academic, government, industry, and professional society advisory boards including: Networking and Information Technology (NITRD) Technical Advisory Group to the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST), National Academies of Sciences' Computer Science and Telecommunications Board (former chair), ACM Council, Computing Research Association Board, DARPA ISAT (former chair), American Association for the Advancement of Science Section on Information, Computing and Communications (former chair), NSF's CISE Advisory Committee, the National Library of Medicine Blue Ribbon Panel, Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics, New York City Task force on Automated Decision Making, Microsoft Trustworthy Computing Academic Advisory Board, General Electric Academic Software Advisory Panel, Intel Research Pittsburgh's Advisory Board, Dartmouth's Institute for Security Technology Studies Advisory Committee, and Idaho National Laboratory and Homeland Security Strategic Advisory Committee. She has served on the American Academy of Arts and Sciences membership panel Class 1 Section 6, the ACM Infosys Award Committee, the ACM Kanellakis Award Committee, the ACM Karlstrom Outstanding Educator Award Committee, and the Sloan Research Fellowships Program Committee. She was the co-chair of the inaugural ACM-IMS Foundations of Data Science Conference, the Technical Symposium of Formal Methods'99, the UW-MSR-CMU 2003 Software Security Summer Institute, and the First International Symposium on Secure Software Engineering. She served as co-chair of NITRD from 2007-2010. She organized the first academic Data Science Leadership Summit, sponsored by the Moore Foundation, NSF, and the Sloan Foundation, which has led to the creation of the Academic Data Science Allicance. She was on the Computer Science faculty at the University of Southern California and has worked at Bell Laboratories, USC/Information Sciences Institute, and Xerox Palo Alto Research Laboratories. She spent sabbaticals at MIT in 1992 and at Microsoft Research 2002-2003. She has consulted for Digital Equipment Corporation, the Mellon Institute (Carnegie Mellon Research Institute), System Development Corporation, and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Professor Wing received the CRA Distinguished Service Award in 2011 and the ACM Distinguished Service Award in 2014. She is a member of Sigma Xi, Phi Beta Kappa, Tau Beta Pi, and Eta Kappa Nu. She is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE),and the National Academy of Innovators. She is a member of the National Academy of Engineering. She holds an honorary doctorate of technology from Linkoping University, Sweden.