Swedish Institute of Computer Science
Established | 1985 |
---|---|
Focus | Applied computer science |
Head | Staffan Truvé |
Faculty | 160 researchers |
Staff | 200 employees total |
Location | Kista district, Stockholm, Södermanland and Uppland, Sweden |
Coordinates | Coordinates: 59°24′18″N 17°56′59″E / 59.4049°N 17.9496°E |
Address |
Box 1263, SE-164 29 Kista, Sweden |
Website |
www |
The Swedish Institute of Computer Science (SICS) is an independent non-profit research organization with a research focus on applied computer science. The institute conducts research in several areas, including networked embedded systems, future Internet technologies, large scale network-based applications, and human–computer interaction. Research projects at SICS are typically conducted in cooperation with both industry and academia.
In January 2005, SICS had about 88 employees, of which 77 were researchers, 30 with PhD degrees. As of April 2016, SICS had about 200 employees, of which 160 were researchers, 83 with PhD degrees. The institute is headquartered in the Kista district of Stockholm, with the main office in the Electrum building.
Software
Several well-known software packages have been developed at SICS:
- Contiki, an operating system for small-memory embedded devices
- Delegent, an authorization server
- Distributed Interactive Virtual Environment or DIVE in short
- lwIP, a TCP/IP stack for embedded systems
- Oz-Mozart, a multi-platform programming system
- Nemesis, a concept exokernel operating system
- Protothreads, light-weight stackless threads
- Quintus Prolog and SICStus Prolog, Prolog implementations
- Simics, a full-system simulator originally developed at SICS
- uIP, a TCP/IP stack for embedded systems
Academic output
The research at SICS results in approximately 100 refereed publications in academic journals, conferences and workshops per year. Around 2-4 SICS researchers receive higher academic degrees per year, and 1-3 persons move to academia for tenured positions.
SICS was ranked as the 15th most acknowledged computer science research institution in the world in an article in December 2004 issue of the highly esteemed journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). SICS is the only Swedish institution included in the list, and is one of two European institutions (the other one is INRIA) alongside 13 well-known American institutions, several of them larger than SICS.[1]
Notable spin-off companies
- Dynarc (1997)
- Effnet (1997)
- Virtutech (1998)
- PipeBeach (1998)
- Tacton Systems (1998) - knowledge based solutions for sales and product configuration
- BotBox (1999)
- Voxi (1999)
- VerySolid (2004)
- Axiomatics (2006) - security solutions for digital data assets
- Asimus (2006) - search technology
- Peerialism (2007) - scalable and flexible file storage and video streaming solutions
- Gavagai (2008) - scalable and robust representation of semantics of linguistic data
Funding
SICS is owned jointly, 60% by the Swedish government, and 40% by Swedish industry. The government owners are the Research Institutes of Sweden (Rise), Swedish ICT, and the Defence Materiel Administration (FMV). The industry owners are a consortium of Ericsson, Asea Brown Boveri (ABB), Saab Group, Green Cargo, Bombardier Transportation, and TeliaSonera.
SICS research is funded by the owners, by national funding sources, often Vinnova (the Swedish Government Agency for Innovation Systems) and the Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF), and by industrial collaboration partners. SICS also participates in several European research projects funded by the European Commission.
History
SICS was formed in 1985.
References
- ↑ Giles, C. L.; Councill, I. G. (December 15, 2004). "Who gets acknowledged: Measuring scientific contributions through automatic acknowledgment indexing" (PDF). Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 101 (51): 17599–17604. Bibcode:2004PNAS..10117599G. doi:10.1073/pnas.0407743101.