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Lixia Zhang

Lixia Zhang
Born China
Residence Sherman Oaks, California
Fields Computer networks
Institutions University of California, Los Angeles
Education California State University, Los Angeles
Alma mater Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Doctoral advisor David D. Clark
Known for
Middlebox

Lixia Zhang is the Jonathan B. Postel Professor of Computer Science at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her expertise is in computer networks; she helped found the Internet Engineering Task Force, designed the , coined the term "middlebox", and pioneered the development of named data networking.

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

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

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. She was also a member of the Internet Architecture Board, from 1994 to 1996 and again from 2005 to 2009.

A protocol she designed for changing the settings in an experimental network setup became the basis for the . 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.


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Wikipedia

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