2025 Open Source Research Experience

Matching summer students with research mentors and sponsors.

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The Open Source Research Experience (OSRE) program provides support for undergraduate and graduate students contributing to open source projects and reproducible research efforts. With its dual focus on both increasing open source communities and making computational research efforts reproducible, the OSRE supports a wide variety of projects. In connection with the OSRE, the UCSC OSPO has taken part in the Google Summer of Code as a mentor organization and managed other sponsored programs such as the NSF funded Summer of Reproducibility. Information from past OSRE years can be found here: 2024, 2023 and 2022 (final 2022 reports). Mentors interested in participating in the OSRE (including for projects relevant to GSoC and the SoR) can post their project ideas for students to review. Project ideas are short abstracts that provide an overview of the tasks students will accomplish over the summer. See mentor page for more details. Interested Students or other newcomers to open source or reproducibility should review these project ideas and work with mentors to develop a full proposal. Student projects are due by April 4, 2024. See student information page for more details.

Table of Content: OSRE News | OSRE 2025 | For students | Student pages | For mentors | For sponsors | Timeline | Projects | Tag cloud | Mentors and Contributors

2025 Open Source Research Experience

OSRE News

OSRE 2025

Open Source Research Experience

As last year OSRE 2025 will include mentors across multiple University of California campuses. Project ideas are listed below.

This year will again include the Summer of Reproducibility with research projects around producing and using reproducibility artifacts (see also ctuning.org and sysartifacts). Quite a few conferences are now offering awards for reproducibility artifacts. This encourages authors to produce reproducibility artifacts. There is great potential for using these artifacts not only for validating research results but also as teaching tools in classrooms and as baselines in research labs. Making producing and using reproducibility artifacts easier can significantly accelerate the rate of insights. The Summer of Reproducibility gives summer students the opportunity to help out in this cutting-edge effort and acquire valuable skills related to reproducibility.

Summer of Reproducibility projects do not need to have at least one UC-affliated mentor.

For students

If you are interested, have a look at our guidelines for students, which includes timelines on when to contact mentors and proposal guidelines and expectations.

Mentor project ideas will be published beginning in January and updated through February. Students are asked to wait to reach out to mentors until late February 2025. The proposal deadline is expected to be late March / early April.

Students interested in applying to any of our projects should join our Slack channel before March 20. This channel will open for students in February and a link will be provided then.

You can also use our Gitter channel for general questions before reaching out to mentors. https://gitter.im/uc_ospo-osre/community

Gitter
Note that this channel is reviewed by the org admin periodically and meant for general organizational questions.

Due to the open source nature of all OSRE projects, contributions are welcome from students or other newcomers from anywhere in the world. Please note that you must have work authorization in your country of residence to take part in this program. Please contact ospo-info-group@ucsc.edu if you have any questions about your eligibility.

We typically support the work of undergraduate students; however graduate students may also apply to work on more advanced project ideas. Please check out the project ideas page and contact the mentor if you have questions.

Student pages

Go to 2024 student pages

We are asking OSRE 2025 students and contributors to share their progress on a regular basis. We are excited to be able to highlight their work on this website and in events such as our Open Source Symposium. This blog post contains instructions on how to start highlighting contributor work with blog posts, also known as “student pages”. And here they are:

*

For projects and mentors

The UCSC OSPO is looking for mentors to be part of our 2025 Open Source Research Experience Program (OSRE), which also includes our NSF funded the Summer of Reproducibility (SoR). Please read the FAQ for Mentors and, if interested in participating, the instructions for posting projects.

While typical OSRE supported projects require mentors who are connected to University of California-based open source projects, the Summer of Reproducibility allows us to also support mentors interested in research projects related to the creation and usage of reproducibilty artifacts.

The OSRE aims to increase student capabilities in working in open source projects and creating reproducible artifacts, as well as add productive open source contributors and promote open source and reproducibility throughout the UC system and beyond.

The program team at the UCSC OSPO values diversity and inclusion in all our projects. We invite mentors from groups traditionally excluded in computer science/open source communities to participate in this program.

Why should you be an OSRE mentor?

If you could use undergraduate* research assistance over the summer with your on-going research, this is a great opportunity to get matched to top students. Like Google Summer of Code, the OSRE allows the mentors to choose the students they want to work with based on an interactive and iterative proposal process. The proposal process provides mentors the opportunity to select someone they want to work with who will benefit their project and research. (*A limited number of SoR projects can also support graduate students based on need for advanced expertise.)

Who can be a mentor?

Your project needs to

  • EITHER have at least one mentor affiliated with the University of California or associated DOE national labs
  • OR have some connection to producing or using reproducibility artifacts.

For University of California (UC) projects: Any UC-affiliated faculty, researchers or graduate students working on projects that are or will ultimately be part of an open source community/ecosystem.

For Summer of Reproducibility (SoR) projects: Researchers and faculty looking to support the open source production or use of reproducibility artifacts.

All software created as part of an OSRE project must be released as free and open source under a license that is both approved by the Open Source Initiative (OSI) and recognized as free by the Free Software Foundation (FSF).

For more details, please see the FAQ for Mentors and the instructions for posting projects.

For sponsors

Is your organization looking to use open source more effectively and want to support projects that directly benefit your business or industry?

Does your company want to strengthen the talent pipeline able to work on technologies essential to your organization’s success?

Do you want to collaborate with innovative open source projects being developed by University of California researchers?

The UC Open Source Research Experience (OSRE) offers your organization the chance to participate in projects that can help your development cycles run faster, benefit from wide collaborations, and help support workforce development in domains your organization needs.

To become a sponsor, fill out the Sponsorship Interest Form. You will be asked to indicate the level of sponsorship you would like to fund and the open source projects you are most interested in engaging with.

Benefits of sponsorship

  • Collaborating on innovative project that are of strategic interest to your industry;
  • Supporting the teaching of open source techniques to a wide range of student contributors;
  • Interacting with the next generation of open source leaders and up and coming talent; and
  • Recognition as an OSRE Sponsor at the Open Source Research Symposium (Fall 2025)

OSRE Sponsor Levels

LevelAmount
Bronze$3,750 (covers 50% of one student stipend for summer)
Silver$7,500 (covers one student full-time for summer)
Gold$15,000 (covers two students full-time for summer)
Table: OSRE Sponsorship Levels

Becoming a Sponsor

Becoming a sponsor is easy! Fill out the Sponsorship Interest Form or reach out to the OSRE Admins by April 20. Information requested by the form include: name of contact person, level of sponsorship, and projects you are most interested in (if applicable.) The OSRE Admins will follow up with next steps for finalizing the sponsorship process.

Timeline

Go to 2024 timeline

Feb 5Priority deadline for mentors posting project ideas for OSRE/SoR consideration
Feb 20Deadline for mentors posting projects for OSRE/SoR consideration
Feb 20Accepted Mentor Organizations announced by GSoC -
Feb 20 - Apr 2Contributors can begin reaching out to mentors for guidance and join OSRE slack channel (joining Slack Channel is REQUIRED for proposals to be considered.
Mar 17Deadline for students to join Slack channel (required for proposal to be considered)
Apr 1Student proposal deadline
Apr 3 - 22Mentors evaluate and rank student proposals
Apr 24Student proposal rankings completed by Org Admins
May 1Accepted student proposals announced
May 2 - May 28Community Bonding / Onboarding
June - August*OSRE participants work on projects / includes one mid-term evaluation
*Project start and end dates are flexible but need to be OK’d with Mentor and Org Admin
Table: OSRE 2025 Timeline

Project Topics

Across all years

AI AI AI for education analytics API design application development artifact asicdesign autonomous vehicles benchmarking bioinformatics biology Bottleneck Analysis bug analysis C++ causeway Chameleon chemistry chip design cloud cloud computing compression COMPSs computational storage computer systems congestion control contributing csharp data analysis data management data science data visualization databases debugging distributed system distributed systems diversity and inclusion DNN DNN training documentation education educational technologies erasure coding events FABRIC FasTensor genomics GNN GPU gsco24 gsoc24 HDL High Performance Computing (HPC) hpc I/O key-value key-value stores laboratory automation Lawrence Berkeley National Lab LBNL linear algebra LLM load testing machine learning machinelearning MPI networking newcomers nyu openroad operating systems ospo osre osre2024 osre22 osre23 osre24 osss performance performance analysis performance benchmarks Performance Modeling polyphy programmable storage programming languages provenance python reproducibility resource management RO-Crate robotics sc24 scalability scheduling scientfic computing scientific visualization Scientific Workflows sensor development SLICES-RI software packaging sor spatial transcriptomics statwrap storage storage system storage systems Streaming Processing students TCP teaching tech4good tensor processing types uc ucospo ucsc ucsd UI UX video analytic video analytics visualization web development website design

Administration

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Stephanie Lieggi

Executive Director of OSPO, Executive Director of CROSS, UC Santa Cruz

University of California Mentors

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Stephanie Lieggi

Executive Director of OSPO, Executive Director of CROSS, UC Santa Cruz

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Emily Lovell

OSPO Incubator Fellow, UC Santa Cruz

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Bin Dong

Research Scientist, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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John Wu

Senior Computer Scientist, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Jean Luca Bez

Research Scientist, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Leilani H. Gilpin

Assistant Professor, UC Santa Cruz

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Ziheng Duan

Ph.D. Student, University of California, Irvine

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Dustin Richmond

Assistant Professor of Computer Science & Engineering at UC Santa Cruz

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Tyler Sheaves

PhD Student at UC Davis

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David Lee

Assistant Professor, UC Santa Cruz

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Colleen Josephson

Assistant Professor at UC Santa Cruz

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Jose Renau

Professor of Computer Science & Engineering, Department Chair

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Sakshi Garg

Ph.D. Student, UC Santa Cruz

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Austin Rovinski

Assistant Professor, New York University

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Indira Iyer

Head of Customer Success and Outreach

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Jack Luar

Student at National University of Singapore

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Matt Liberty

VP R&D Precision Innovations & Visiting Scholar UCSD

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Vitor Bandeira

Cloud and DevOps Architect at Precision Innovations & Visiting Scholar UCSD & PhD Candidate UFRGS

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Kiran Deol

Undergraduate at the University of Alberta

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Oskar Elek

OSPO Incubator Fellow, Postdoctoral Researcher, UC Santa Cruz

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Houjun Tang

Computer Research Scientist, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Jesse Cirimelli-Low

Ph.D. Student, UC Santa Cruz

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Cindy Rubio González

Associate Professor, UC Davis

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Hao-Nan Zhu

Ph.D. Student, University of California, Davis

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Dan Bryce

Fellow, Smart Information Flow Technologies, LLC.

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Tim Fallon

Postdoctoral Fellow, University of California, San Diego

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Aldrin Montana

PhD Student, UC Santa Cruz

Summer of Reproducibility Mentors

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Raül Sirvent

Established Researcher, Barcelona Supercomputing Center

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Kexin Pei

Neubauer Family Assistant Professor of Computer Science, University of Chicago

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Ruidan Li

Ph.D. Student, University of Chicago

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Tanu Malik

Associate Professor for Databases, High Performance and Scientific Computing, Systems Development

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Anjus George

HPC Storage R&D staff, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Meng Wang

PhD Student, University of Chicago

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Swami Sundararaman

Senior Manager, IBM

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Yuyang (Roy) Huang

Ph.D. Student, University of Chicago

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Sascha Hunold

Associate Professor, Technical University of Vienna

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Ayse Coskun

Interim Associate Dean for Research and Faculty Development, Professor (ECE, SE); Director, Center for Information and Systems

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Michael Sherman

Research Software Engineer at the University of Chicago

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Flavio Castro

Systems Developer, Argonne National Laboratory

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Joaquin Chung

Research Scientist, Argonne National Laboratory

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Kate Keahey

Scientist at the Argonne National Laboratory and Senior Fellow at the Computation Institute at the University of Chicago

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Mark Powers

Research Software Engineer at the University of Chicago

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Ashutosh Srivastava

PhD Student, NYU Tandon School of Engineering

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Fraida Fund

Research Assistant Professor, NYU Tandon School of Engineering

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Bogdan "Bo" Stoica

PhD Student, University of Chicago

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Yang Wang

Associate Professor, The Ohio State University

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John Bent

Research Scientist, Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Ray Andrew Sinurat

PhD Student, University of Chicago

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Sandeep Madireddy

Computer Scientist at Argonne National Laboratory

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David Koop

Assistant Professor, Northern Illinois University

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Daniar H. Kurniawan

Ph.D. Candidate, University of Chicago

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Haryadi S. Gunawi

Associate Professor, University of Chicago

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In Kee Kim

Assistant Professor, University of Georgia

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Junchen Jiang

Assitant Professor, University of Chicago

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Luke Rasmussen

Senior Clinical Research Associate, Northwestern University

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Ben Greenman

PI at the University of Utah

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Georg Carle

Full Professor, Technical University of Munich

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Sebastian Gallenmüller

PostDoc, Technical University of Munich

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Miao YU

Ph.D. Student, The Ohio State University

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Cindy Rubio González

Associate Professor, UC Davis

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Hao-Nan Zhu

Ph.D. Student, University of California, Davis

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João Felipe Pimentel

Postdoctoral Researcher, Northern Arizona University

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Juliana Freire

Professor of Computer Science and Engineering and Data Science at NYU

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Dan Bryce

Fellow, Smart Information Flow Technologies, LLC.

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Tim Fallon

Postdoctoral Fellow, University of California, San Diego

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Vijay Chidambaram

Associate Professor, The University of Texas at Austin

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Anjo Vahldiek-Oberwagner

Research Scientist, Intel Labs

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Yeonju Ro

Ph.D. Student, The University of Texas at Austin