11 Aralık 2013 Çarşamba

Two Notre Dame faculty named IEEE Fellows

Martin Haenggi, left, and J. Nicholas Laneman Martin Haenggi, left, and J. Nicholas Laneman


Martin Haenggi, professor of electrical engineering, and J. Nicholas Laneman, associate professor of electrical engineering, have been named fellows of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).


The IEEE is the world’s major expert association for advancing technological innovation for humanity. Through its 400,000 members in 160 nations, the association is a top authority on a wide variety of areas ranging from aerospace methods, computers and telecommunications to biomedical engineering, electrical power and customer electronics. IEEE fellow is the highest grade of membership and distinction, reserved for pick members who have established an extraordinary record of accomplishments in any of the IEEE fields of interest.


A University of Notre Dame faculty member given that 2000, Haenggi was honored for contributions to the spatial modeling and examination of wireless networks. Specifically, he has devised sophisticated versions for cellular, cognitive, ad hoc and sensor networks and created mathematical strategies that permit network performance analyses that explicitly account for the spatial distribution of wireless nodes or customers.


Haenggi also serves as a concurrent professor of applied and computational mathematics and statistics. He received the Nationwide Science Basis Occupation Award in 2005 and the 2010 IEEE Communication Society Best Tutorial Paper Award. He is the author of the textbook “Stochastic Geometry for Wireless Networks” (Cambridge, 2012), two other books and much more than 180 publications in journals and conferences. He at the moment serves as the chair of the Executive Editorial Committee of the IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications. Haenggi received his Ph.D. degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich in 1999.


Laneman was recognized for contributions to multiphop relaying and cooperative communication for wireless networks, pioneering new approaches for trading off signal strength and spatial diversity rewards with bandwidth expenses when several wireless transmitters relay signals for each and every other to combat multipath propagation effects. Laneman also developed a wireless network testbed, based on software-defined radio (SDR), to foster the implementation and verification of communications algorithms and to enhance SDR technology.


The founding director of the Wireless Institute at Notre Dame, Laneman also is a fellow of the Reilly Center for Science, Engineering and Values at Notre Dame. He has acquired the 2006 Presidential Early-Profession Award for Scientists and Engineers, a 2006 NSF Profession Award and a 2003 Oak Ridge Connected Universities Ralph E. Powe Junior Faculty Enhancement Award. The author or co-writer of a lot more than 115 publications, he was recognized by Thomson Reuters as a 2010 ISI Extremely Cited Researcher. He is also the co-inventor on five U.S. patents and has numerous patents pending. Laneman acquired his Ph.D. degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technologies in 2002.


Haenggi and Laneman join numerous other Notre Dame faculty who have been named IEEE fellows, like Panos Antsaklis, Peter Bauer, Gary H. Bernstein, Kevin Bowyer, Daniel J. Costello Jr., Patrick Flynn, Thomas Fuja, Yih-Fang Huang, Peter M. Kogge, Ruey-Wen Liu, James L. Merz, Anthony Michel, Wolfgang Porod and Alan Seabaugh.



Two Notre Dame faculty named IEEE Fellows

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