关于美国科学院院士Andrea Goldsmith教授和University of Arizona and Texas Shuguang Cui教授学术报告的通知

报告时间:911日(周一)16:00-18:00       

报告地点:舟山校区图书馆503会议室

报告题目:The future of wireless and what it will enable

报告人:Andrea Goldsmithprofessor in the School of Engineering and a professor of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University member of the National Academy of Engineeringand the American Academy of Arts and Science

 

报告题目:New Paradigm in Energy Harvesting Wireless Communication
报告人:Shuguang Cuiprofessor in Electrical and Computer Engineering at the Univ. of Arizona and Texas A&M University

 

欢迎各位老师和同学参加!

 

Title:

The future of wireless and what it will enable

 

Speaker :Andrea Goldsmith

 

Abstract:

Wireless technology has enormous potential to change the way we live, work, and play over the next several decades. Future wireless networks will support 100 Gbpscommunication between people, devices, and the “Internet of Things,” with high reliability and uniform coverage indoors and out. The shortage of spectrum to support such systems will be alleviated by advances in massive MIMO and mmW technology as well as cognitive radios. Wireless technology will also enable smart and energy-efficient homes and buildings, automated highways and skyways, and in-body networks for monitoring, analysis and treatment of medical conditions. Breakthrough energy-efficiency architectures, algorithms and hardware will allow wireless networks to be powered by tiny batteries, energy-harvesting, or over-the-air power transfer. Finally, new communication systems based on biology and chemistry to encode bits will enable a wide range of new micro and macroscale applications. There are many technical challenges that must be overcome in order to make this vision a reality. This talk will describe what the wireless future might look like along with some of the innovations and breakthroughs required to realize this vision.

 Bio:

Andrea Goldsmith is the Stephen Harris professor in the School of Engineering and a professor of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University. She also serves on Stanford’s Budget Group, Committee on Research, and Planning and Policy Board. She previously served as Chair of Stanford’s Faculty Senate and as a member of its Commissions on Graduate Education and on Undergraduate Education,as well as its Task Force on Women and Leadership. She co-founded and served as Chief Technical Officer of Plume WiFi (formerly Accelera, Inc.) and of Quantenna (QTNA), Inc. She has also held industry positions at Maxim Technologies, Memorylink Corporation, and AT&T Bell Laboratories. In the IEEE Dr. Goldsmith served on the Board of Governors for both the Information Theory and Communications societies. She has also been a Distinguished Lecturer for both societies, served as President of the IEEE Information Theory Society in 2009, founded and chaired the student committee of the IEEE Information Theory society, and chaired the Emerging Technology Committee of the IEEE Communications Society. She currently chairs the IEEE TAB committee on diversity and inclusion, and the Women in Technology Leadership Roundtable working group on metrics.

Dr. Goldsmith is a member of the National Academy of Engineeringand the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a Fellow of the IEEE and of Stanford, and has received several awards for her work, including the IEEE ComSoc Edwin H. Armstrong Achievement Award as well as Technical Achievement Awards in Communications Theory and in Wireless Communications,  the National Academy of Engineering Gilbreth Lecture Award, the IEEE ComSoc and Information Theory Society Joint Paper Award, the IEEE ComSoc Best Tutorial Paper Award, the Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, the WICE Technical Achievement Award, and the Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal’s Women of Influence Award. She is author of the book ``Wireless Communications'' and co-author of the books ``MIMO Wireless Communications'' and “Principles of Cognitive Radio,” all published by Cambridge University Press, as well as an inventor on 28 patents. Her research interests are in information theory and communication theory, and their application to wireless communications and related fields. She received the B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering from U.C. Berkeley.

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Title:

New Paradigm in Energy Harvesting Wireless Communication

 

Speaker :Shuguang Cui

 

Abstract:

Energy harvesting from the environment provides solutions for several critical challenges in building future ICT systems: reduce utility bills, control carbon pollution, and enable everlasting power supplies in IoT applications. In this talk, we first review the recent developments in the field of energy harvesting wireless communication, followed by a specific case study over an energy harvesting communication system. We then focus on the discussions of several promising directions in this new paradigm: the concept of power access vs. spectrum access, the exploration of energy diversity, and the system/network/link multilevel information and energy joint management. 

 

Bio:

Shuguang Cui received his Ph.D in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University, California, USA, in 2005. Afterwards, he has been working as assistant, associate, and full professor in Electrical and Computer Engineering at the Univ. of Arizona and Texas A&M University. He is currently a Child Family Endowed Chair Professorin Electrical and Computer Engineering at the Univ. of California-Davis. His current research interests focus on data driven large-scale system control and resource management, large data set analysis, IoT system design, energy harvesting based communication system design, and cognitive network optimization. He was selected as the Thomson Reuters Highly Cited Researcher and listed in the Worlds’ Most Influential Scientific Minds by ScienceWatch in 2014. He was the recipient of the IEEE Signal Processing Society 2012 Best Paper Award. He has served as the general co-chair and TPC co-chairs for many IEEE conferences. He has also been serving as thearea editor for IEEE Signal Processing Magazine, and associate editors for IEEE Transactions on Big Data, IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, IEEE JSAC Series on Green Communications and Networking, and IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications. He has been the elected member for IEEE Signal Processing Society SPCOM Technical Committee (2009~2014) and the elected Chair for IEEE ComSoc Wireless Technical Committee (2017~2018). He is a member of the Steering Committee for both IEEE Transactions on Big Data and IEEE Transactions on Cognitive Communications and Networking. He is also a member of the IEEE ComSoc Emerging Technology Committee. He was elected as an IEEE Fellow in 2013 and an IEEE ComSoc Distinguished Lecturerin 2014.