CISE Faculty Affiliates Named IEEE Fellows

CISE Faculty Affiliates Professors W. Clem Karl (ECE, BME, SE), Yannis Paschalidis (ECE, SE), and Vivek Goyal (ECE) have been named as 2014 IEEE Fellows, the highest grade of membership in the world’s leading professional association for advancing technology for the benefit of society. Professor Theodore Moustakas (ECE, MSE) was also named a 2014 IEEE Fellow.

The IEEE Grade of Fellow is conferred by the IEEE Board of Directors upon a person with an outstanding record of accomplishments in any of the IEEE fields of interest. The evaluation process is highly selective; the total number of Fellows named in any one year cannot exceed one-tenth of one-percent of the total voting membership. Accordingly, the distinction of IEEE Fellow represents the highest grade of membership, and is recognized by the technical community as a prestigious honor and an important career achievement.

W. Clem Karl

Professor W. Clem Karl (ECE, BME, SE)

Karl was recognized for his contributions to “statistical signal processing and image reconstruction.” He has developed several statistical models for the extraction of information from diverse data sources in the presence of uncertainty, and applied them in projects that include automatic target detection and recognition for synthetic aperture radar; locating oil deposits and analyzing the earth’s atmosphere; and monitoring medical conditions using tomography and MRI. A member of the BU faculty since 1995, Karl has assumed many leadership roles for the IEEE.  Currently editor-in-chief of IEEE Transactions on Image Processing, he is a member of the Board of Governors and Conference Board of the Signal Processing Society; the Transactions on Medical Imaging Steering Committee; the Biomedical Image and Signal Processing Technical Committee; and the Technical Committee Review Board. He has co-organized IEEE workshops on statistical signal processing and bioinformatics, and was general chair of the 2009 IEEE International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging. Among other things, Karl is developing methods to improve the detection of explosives in luggage. The technology could increase passenger safety while reducing delays and other inconveniences for air travelers, such as having to remove laptops and other electronic devices from bags.

“This is a great honor, and I’m humbled that my peers would confer it on me,” said Karl.

Yannis Paschalidis

Professor Yannis Paschalidis (ECE, SE)

Paschalidis was recognized for his contributions to “the control and optimization of communication and sensor networks, manufacturing systems and biological systems.” Since joining the College of Engineering faculty in 1996, he has developed sophisticated algorithms for everything from a homeland security early warning sensor network to a next-generation electronic healthcare management system. Co-director of the College’s Center for Information and Systems Engineering (CISE), an ENG Distinguished Faculty Fellow and affiliate of the BioMolecular Engineering Research Center, Paschalidis has a diverse research portfolio that spans the fields of systems and control, networking, applied probability, optimization, operations research, computational biology and bioinformatics. His work has resulted in new applications in communication and sensor networks, protein docking, logistics, cyber-security, robotics, the smart grid and finance. Paschalidis has received several honors, including a CAREER award from the National Science Foundation, an invitation to participate in the National Academy of Engineering Frontiers of Engineering Symposium, two best paper awards, and best performance at a computational biology competition. He is the editor-in-chief of the IEEE Transactions on Control of Network Systems and a member of the Board of Governors of the IEEE Control Systems Society.

“I am elated to have been named an IEEE Fellow,” said Paschalidis. “Much credit is due to all my students and postdoctoral associates, past and present, who have contributed to the work being recognized, and all my collaborators, many of them here at Boston University.”

Vivek Goyal

Assistant Professor Vivek Goyal (ECE)

Visiting Professor Vivek Goyal (ECE), who will be an assistant professor in the ECE Department starting in January, was also named an IEEE Fellow. Goyal was recognized “for contributions to information representations and their applications in acquisition, communication, and estimation.” Goyal initially gained widespread attention for developing methods for information representation suitable for lossy packetized communication, such as communication over the Internet.  This work was popularized by his award-winning article, “Multiple description coding:  Compression meets the network.”  Later, Goyal co-invented WEBRC, the first receiver-driven, multiple rate congestion control protocol to be an Internet standard for IP multicast. His recent work focuses on exploiting efficient information representations to understand and improve acquisition systems.  In collaboration with students and colleagues at MIT, Goyal has achieved speed-ups in MRI, explained logarithmic scaling in human perception, and realized unprecedented resolution relative to pulse bandwidth and detector sampling rate in an active optical ranging.  Most recently, Goyal led the team that developed first-photon imaging, a method for acquiring reflectance and 3D structure of scene from only one detected photon per pixel, even in the presence of significant ambient light.  He is also the coauthor of signal processing textbooks: Foundations of Signal Processing (published by Cambridge University Press) and Fourier and Wavelet Signal Processing (forthcoming).

Theodore Moustakas

Professor Theodore Moustakas (ECE, MSE)

Moustakas was recognized for his contributions to “the epitaxial growth of nitride semiconductors.” He is a trailblazer in molecular beam epitaxy, a versatile and advanced thin-film growth technique used to make high-precision, nitride (nitrogen compound-based) semiconductor materials used in fiber-optic, cellular, satellite and other applications. His most notable achievements include pioneering the nucleation steps for the growth of gallium nitride on sapphire and other substrates, an essential process for the manufacture of blue LEDs, which are widely used in solid state lighting applications; and developing highly-efficient, deep ultraviolet (UV) LEDs, which are expected to provide environmentally friendly water and air purification.  A member of the ENG faculty for more than 30 years and ENG Distinguished Scholar who helped shape the Materials Science & Engineering Division, Moustakas has had a broad impact on his field, through 25 patents, hundreds of invited talks and journal papers and 10,000 citations in research literature. Recently selected as the recipient of the Molecular Beam Epitaxy (MBE) Innovator Award, he is also a Fellow of the American Physical Society and Electrochemical Society, and Charter Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors. In 2013 he was named the Boston University Innovator of the Year. Moustakas is currently working to create visible and UV LEDs and lasers for solid-state white lighting, water and air sterilization, and identification of biological and chemical agents; investigating indium gallium nitride “quantum dots” that boost solar cell efficiency; and, in collaboration with Associate Professor Roberto Paiella (ECE, MSE), studying the use of nitride semiconductor structures for green LED applications and for emitters and detectors operating in the far infrared.

“I am delighted to receive this prestigious award and I am very grateful to many of my collaborators at BU and other institutions, as well the outstanding past and current students that I have had the fortune of mentoring,” said Moustakas.

Dedicated to the advancement of technology, the IEEE publishes 30 percent of the world’s literature in the electrical and electronics engineering and computer science fields, and has developed more than 900 active industry standards.  The association also sponsors or co-sponsors nearly 400 international technical conferences each year.