Karlin went to Stanford for her undergraduate studies, receiving a bachelor's degree in 1981.[3] She stayed at Stanford for graduate school, and earned Ph.D. in 1987 under the supervision of Jeffrey Ullman.[4] She continued to work near Stanford, at the DEC Systems Research Center, for five years, before moving to the University of Washington in 1994.[3] She was program chair of the IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science in 1997.[3][5]
Karlin was also one of the founding members of the rock music band Severe Tire Damage,[6] and in 1993 as part of the band she participated in the first live music broadcast on the Internet.[7]
Feeley, M. J.; Morgan, W. E.; Pighin, E. P.; Karlin, A. R.; Levy, H. M.; Thekkath, C. A. (1995), "Implementing global memory management in a workstation cluster", Proceedings of the 15th ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles (SOSP '95), pp. 201–212, doi:10.1145/224056.224072, ISBN978-0897917155.
Wolman, Alec; Voelker, M.; Sharma, Nitin; Cardwell, Neal; Karlin, Anna; Levy, Henry M. (1999), "On the scale and performance of cooperative Web proxy caching", Proceedings of the 17th ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles (SOSP '99), pp. 16–31, CiteSeerX10.1.1.74.7126, doi:10.1145/319151.319153, ISBN978-1581131406.
Savage, Stefan; Wetherall, David; Karlin, Anna; Anderson, Tom (2001), "Network support for IP traceback", IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, 9 (3): 226–237, doi:10.1109/90.929847.
Karlin, Anna; Peres, Yuval (2017), Game Theory, Alive, Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society.[18]
^ abSpeaker biographyArchived January 3, 2013, at the Wayback Machine for Grace Hopper Lecture Series, University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Science, retrieved 2012-02-23.