鶹ýAV

2012 鶹ýAV Medals and 2012 鶹ýAV Fellows
Several members of the Information Theory community have been awarded 鶹ýAV Medals and promoted to 鶹ýAV Fellows.
Jul 11, 2012

鶹ýAV Richard W. Hamming Medal

Michael G. Luby and Amin Shokrollahi , for the conception, development, and analysis of practical rateless codes.

鶹ýAV Alexander Graham Bell Medal

Leonard Kleinrock , for pioneering contributions to modeling, analysis, and design of packet-switching networks.

鶹ýAV Jack S. Kilby Signal Processing Medal

Clifford Carter , for contributions to the fundamentalsof coherence and time-delay estimationand to underwater acoustics signal processing.

鶹ýAV Koji Kobayashi Computerand Communications Award

Jean Walrand , for contributions to the theory and algorithms for high-speed switchingand network resource allocation.

鶹ýAV Eric E. Sumner Award

Jack H. Winters and Andreas Molisch , for contributions to the theory and application of multiple-antenna systemsin wireless communications.

鶹ýAV Kiyo Tomiyasu Award

Mung Chiang , for demonstrating the practicability of a new theoretical foundation for the analysis and design of communication networks.

鶹ýAV Judith A. Resnik Award

Pramod K. Varshney , for contributions to and leadership in
the theory and practiceof multisensor data fusionfor aerospace and bioengineering applications.

鶹ýAV Donald G. Fink Prize Paper Award

Kannan Krishnan , for“Biomedical Nanomagnetics: A Spin Through Possibilitiesin Imaging, Diagnostics and Therapy”, 鶹ýAV Transactions on Magnetics,Vol. 46, No. 7, July 2010, pp. 2523-2558

2012 鶹ýAV Fellows

  • Erdal Arikan,for contributions to coding theory.
  • Martin Bossert,for contributions to reliable data transmission including code constructions and soft decision decoding.
  • Roger Cheng,for contributions to multiuser communications in wireless systems.
  • Stefano Galli,for contributions to theory, practice, and standardization of power line communication networks.
  • Ryuji Kohno,for contributions to spread spectrum and ultra wideband technologies and applications.
  • Adam Krzysak,for contributions to nonparametric algorithms and classification systems for machine learning.
  • Soung Chang Lieu,for contributions to wireless communications and networking.
  • Ranjan Mallik,for contributions to channel characterization in wireless communication systems.
  • Eric Miller,for contributions to inverse problems and physics-based signal and image processing.
  • Eytan Modiano,for contributions to cross-layer resource allocation algorithms for wireless, satellite, and optical networks.
  • Jong-Seon No,for contributions to sequences and cyclic difference sets for communications algorithms.
  • Jean-Christophe Pesquet,for contributions to statistical methods for signal recovery.
  • Konstantinos Plataniotis,for contributions to the theory and application of statistical adaptive learning.
  • Wonjong Rhee,for leadership in dynamic spectrum management systems.
  • Akbar Sayeed,for contributions to statistical signal modeling for wireless communication and sensor networks.
  • Ljubisa Stankovic,for contributions to time-frequency signal analysis.
  • Emre Telatar,for contributions to information theory and coding.
  • Bane Vasic,for contributions to coding theory and its applications in data storage systems and optical communications.
  • Jiangtao Wen,for contributions to multimedia communication technology and standards.
  • Guu-Chang Yang,for contributions to optical code division multiple access.
  • Junshan Zhang,for contributions to cross-layer optimization of wireless networks.