Robert Calderbank
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert Calderbank is a professor of Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Applied and Computational Mathematics at Princeton University. He received a BSc degree from Warwick University in 1975, an MSc degree from Oxford University in 1976, England, and a PhD degree from the California Institute of Technology, all in mathematics. He became a member of the technical staff at Bell Labs in 1980. In 2003, he retired from his position as Vice President of Research to join Princeton University.
He has made numerous contributions to the fields of coding and information theory, and he is a two-time winner of the IEEE Information Theory Prize Paper award. While at Bell Labs, he was part of a team which discovered space–time coding.
He is married to Ingrid Daubechies.
[edit] See also
- Faculty Profile at Princeton.
- Brief Biography.
- Publications on the DBLP.
- Publications from the Arxiv.
- Publications from Google Scholar.
- Robert Calderbank at the Mathematical Genealogy Project.