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Mung Chiang (S’00, M’03, SM’08) is an Asso-
ciate Professor of Electrical Engineering, and an
Affiliated Faculty of Applied and Computational
Mathematics and of Computer Science, at Princeton
University. He received the B.S. (Honors) in Elec-
trical Engineering and Mathematics, M.S. and Ph.D.
degrees in Electrical Engineering from Stanford
Uni versity in 1999, 2000, and 2003, respectively,
and was an Assistant Professor at Princeton Univer-
sity 2003-2008. His research areas include optimiza-
tion, distributed control, and stochastic analysis of
communication networks, with applications to the Internet, wireless networks,
broadband access networks, and content distribution.
His awards include Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and
Engineers 2008 from the White House, Young Investigator Award 2007 from
ONR, TR35 Young Innova tor Award 2007 from Technology Review, Young
Researcher Award Runner-up 2004-2007 from Mathematical Programming
Society, CAREER Award 2005 from NSF, as well as Frontiers of Engineering
Symposium participant 2008 from NAE and SEAS Teaching Commendation
2007 from Princeton University. He was a Princeton University Howard B.
Wentz Junior Faculty and a Hertz Foundation Fello w. His paper awards in-
clude ISI citation Fast Breaking Paper in Computer Science, IEEE INFOCOM
Best Paper Finalist, and IEEE GLOBECOM Best Student Paper. His guest
and associate editorial services include IEEE/ACM Trans. Netw., IEEE Trans.
Inform. Theory, IEEE J. Sel. Area Comm., IEEE Trans. Comm., IEEE Trans.
Wireless Comm., and J. Optimization and Engineering, and he co-chaired
38th Conference on Information Sciences and Systems.
Hazer Inaltekin (S’04, M’06) received his B.S.
degree with High Honors from the Department of
Electrical and Electronic Engineering at Bogazici
Uni versity, Istanbul, Turkey, in 2001. After complet-
ing his undergraduate studies in Turkey, he started
his M.S./Ph.D. program in the School of Electrical
and Computer Engineering at Cornell Univ ersity.
He earned his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees both from
Cornell University in April 2005 and in August
2006, respectively.
He was then with the Wireless Intelligent Systems
Laboratory at Cornell Uni versity as a postdoctoral research scientist until
August 2007. He is currently with the Department of Electrical Engineering
at Princeton University as a postdoctoral research scientist. His research
interests include wireless communications, wireless networks, game theory,
information theory, and financial mathematics.
H. V incent Poor (S’72, M’77, SM’82, F’87) re-
ceived the Ph.D. degree in EECS from Princeton
Uni versity in 1977. From 1977 until 1990, he was
on the faculty of the University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign. Since 1990 he has been on the faculty
at Princeton, where he is the Michael Henry Strater
Univ ersity Professor of Electrical Engineering and
Dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Sci-
ence. Dr . Poor’s research interests are in the areas of
stochastic analysis, statistical signal processing and
their applications in wireless networks and related
fields. Among his publications in these areas are the recent books MIMO
Wireless Communications (Cambridge University Press, 2007), coauthored
with Ezio Biglieri, et al., and Quick est Detection (Cambridge University Press,
2009), coauthored with Olympia Hadjiliadis.
Dr. Poor is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, a Fellow
of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a former Guggenheim
Fellow. He is also a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, the
Optical Society of America, and other organizations. In 1990, he served as
President of the IEEE Information Theory Society, and in 2004-07 he served
as the Editor-in-Chief of the IEEE Transactions on Information Theory.He
was the recipient of the 2005 IEEE Education Medal. Recent recognition
of his work includes the 2007 IEEE Marconi Prize Paper Award, the 2007
Technical Achievement Award of the IEEE Signal Processing Society, and
the 2008 Aaron D. Wyner Award of the IEEE Information Theory Society.
Stephen B. Wicker Stephen B. Wicker (SM’92)
recei ved the B.S.E.E. with High Honors from the
University of Virginia in 1982. He received the
M.S.E.E. from Purdue University in 1983 and a
Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from the University
of Southern California in 1987.
He is a Professor of Electrical and Computer
Engineering at Cornell University, and a member of
the graduate fields of Computer Science and Applied
Mathematics. Professor Wicker was awarded the
1988 Cornell College of Engineering Michael T i en
Teaching Award and the 2000 Cornell School of Electrical and Computer
Engineering Teaching Award.
Professor Wicker is the author of Codes, Graphs, and Iterative Decoding
(Kluwer, 2002), Turbo Coding (Kluwer, 1999), Error Control Systems for
Digital Communication and Storage (Prentice Hall, 1995) and Reed-Solomon
Codes and Their Applications (IEEE Press, 1994). He has served as Associate
Editor for Coding Theory and Techniques for the IEEE Transactions on
Communications, and is currently Associate Editor for the ACM Transactions
on Sensor Networks. He has served two terms as a member of the Board of
Gove rnors of the IEEE Information Theory Society.
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