MICROELECTRONIC SYSTEMS NEWS

FILENUMBER: 9706 BEGIN_KEYWORDS Fellows98 END_KEYWORDS DATE: November 1997 TITLE: IEEE MEMBERS ELECTED TO FELLOW GRADE As of January 1, 1998

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IEEE Fellows Elected as of 1 January 1998


Masami AKAIKE
Science University of Tokyo
Tokyo, Japan
For contributions to nonlinear analysis and design of
millimeter-wave and microwave solid-state devices.

Gerard Argant ALPHONSE
David Sarnoff Research Center
Princeton, NJ
For the practical development of single-mode, high-power,
superluminescent diodes, with applications to fiber optic
gyroscopes, optical amplifiers, spectroscopy, and low
coherence interferometry.

Daniel Lee ALSPACH
Orincon Corporation
San Diego, CA
For leadership in the theoretical development of non-linear
estimation theory and its practical applications to multiple
target data association and tracking problems in ocean
surveillance.

Anthony P. AMBLER
University of Texas at Austin
Austin, TX
For contributions to economics of testing complex digital
devices and systems.

Venkat ANANTHARAM
University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, CA
For contributions to the analysis and control of
communication networks.

Dimitris ANASTASSIOU
Columbia University
New York, NY
For contributions to video technology, developing
high-performance digital image and video coding techniques.

Yoshiharu ANBE
Toshiba Corporation
Tokyo, Japan
For contributions to the research and development of
automatic control system for metal rolling mills.

Edward E. ASLAN
Lockheed Martin Microwave-Narda
Hauppauge, NY
For pioneering work in the instrumentation and measurement
of hazardous electromagnetic fields.

Susan Kathryn AVERY
University of Colorado
Boulder, CO
For scientific and educational leadership and research in
atmospheric science.

Ender AYANOGLU
Lucent Technologies
Holmdel, NJ
For contributions to communication theory and coding
applications in communication networks.

Richard James BACKE
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC
For leadership in the quality engineering and assurance of
key components for pioneering scientific spacecraft.

Duncan Charles BAKER
University of Pretoria
Pretoria, South Africa
For leadership in engineering education in electromagnetic
compatibility, computational electromagnetics, and
ionospheric propagation, and contributions to ionospheric
modeling.

Allen M. BARNETT
AstroPower, Inc.
Newark, DE
For contributions and technical leadership in the
development and commercialization of photovoltaic solar
cells.

Ib BENTZEN-BILKVIST
Holnam Inc.
Dundee, MI
For the implementation of advanced electrical technologies
in the cement industry.

Ashoka Krishna Sarpangal BHAT
University of Victoria
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
For contributions to the analysis, design, and applications
of resonant converters.

Rajaram BHAT
Bellcore
Red Bank, NJ
For contributions to optoelectronic materials and devices
through the advancement of organometallic chemical vapor
deposition of III-V compound semiconductors.

Laxmi Narayan BHUYAN
Texas A&M University
College Station, TX
For contributions to the design and analysis of
interconnection networks and multiprocessor
architectures.

Joel S. BIRNBAUM
Hewlett-Packard Laboratories
Palo Alto, CA
For contributions to RISC computer architectures, and for
leadership in industrial research in measurement, computing,
and communications technologies.

Wolfram A. BOECK
Techn. University of Munich
Muenchen, Germany
For contributions to the development of gas insulated
substations (GIS).

Gloria Faye BOUDREAUX-BARTELS
University of Rhode Island
Kingston, RI
For contributions to time-frequency signal representations
and their applications.

Kevin W. BOWYER
University of South Florida
Tampa, FL
For contributions to algorithms for recognizing objects in
images.

April Susan BROWN
Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, GA
For contributions to the development of lattice-matched and
pseudomorphic high electron mobility field effect
transistors.

Joseph Albert BRUDER
US Air Force Rome Laboratory
Rome, NY
For research and development in the measurement and
calibration concepts and techniques in polarimetric radars.

Richard Joseph BUSCHART
PC & E, Inc.
St. Louis, MO
For development of an analytical electrical area
classification system to provide for superior levels of
safety.

Arthur Robert CALDERBANK
AT&T Research Labs
Murray Hill, NJ
For contributions to the transmission and storage of digital
data.

Andrea CALIFANO
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
Hawthorne, NY
For contributions to research and development of
high-dimensional hashing for computer vision and
computational biology.

Antonio CANTONI
Curtin University of Technology
Perth, Australia
For contributions to the design of filter, antenna arrays
and telecommunications systems using constrained
optimization methods.

Doris Loveday CARVER
Louisiana State University
Baton Rouge, LA
For contributions to the field of software engineering.

Chung CHAN
Northeastern University
Boston, MA
For contributions to research and development of plasma
processes in electronics manufacturing.

Constance J. CHANG-HASNAIN
University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, CA
For contributions to electro-optics in the area of
monolithic semiconductor laser arrays.

Kwong Shu CHAO
Texas Tech University
Lubbock, TX
For contributions in nonlinear and analog circuits.

Richard Alexander CHAPMAN
Texas Instruments
Dallas, TX
For the development of HgCdTe imaging devices and
contributions to CMOS technology.

Young-Kai CHEN
Lucent Technologies
Murray Hill, NJ
For contributions to ultra-short pulse generation using
semiconductor lasers, integrated laser-modulators, and high
frequency InP HBTs.

D. Jack CHRISTOFERSEN
United Power Association
Elk River, MN
For contributions and leadership in enhancing HVDC system
reliability and safety.

David D. CLARK
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA
For leadership in the engineering and deployment of the
protocols that embody the Internet.

Leon COHEN
Hunter College of the City University of New York
New York, NY
For contributions to Time-Varying Spectral Analysis.

David Hall COLWELL
Opercon Systems Inc.
Alameda, CA
For contributions to the advancement of modern protective
relaying practices in power systems.

Kenneth Allen CONNOR
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Troy, NY
For contributions to the development of particle beam
probing for nuclear fusion research.

Antonios Georgiou CONSTANTINIDES
Imperial College
London, England
For contributions to the development of digital signal
processing methods.

Rory A. COOPER
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA
For outstanding contributions to improving quality and
increasing innovation in wheelchair design, and for
leadership in rehabilitation engineering education.

Michael Jean-Georges CORINTHIOS
Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
For contributions to general radix matrix factorization of
generalized spectral analysis transforms.

Edward John COYLE
Purdue University
West Lafayette, IN
For contributions to the theory of nonlinear signal
processing.

Flaviu CRISTIAN
University of California, San Diego
La Jolla, CA
For fundamental contributions to the theory and practice of
fault-tolerant systems design.

Soura DASGUPTA
The University of Iowa
Iowa City, IA
For contributions to parameter robustness analysis and
adaptive parameter estimation.

Larry S. DAVIS
University of Maryland
College Park, MD
For contributions to computer vision, image processing and
high performance computing.

John R. DELLER
Michigan State University
East Lansing, MI
For contributions to system identification and speech
recognition.

Clarence Wilfred DE SILVA
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
For leadership in industrial automation education.

Srinivas DEVADAS
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA
For contributions to logic design and design automation.

Geza DIENES
Andrew Corporation
Rancho Cucamonga, CA
For contributions to the design and development of broadcast
antenna systems.

Tharam Singh DILLON
La Trobe University
Bundoora, Victoria, Australia
For leadership in the development of optimizations for power
systems.

Deepakraj Malhar DIVAN
Soft Switching Technologies Corp.
Middleton, WI
For contributions to power electronics technology.

Michael C. DRIVER
II-VI Inc.
Saxonburg, PA
For contributions to broadband gallium arsenide power
circuits.

David Hung-Chang DU
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, MN
For contributions to database structures and retrieval
algorithms.

Pierre DUHAMEL
ENST
Paris, France
For contributions to the optimization of the Fast Fourier
Transform.

Charles Robert DYER
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Madison, WI
For contributions to shape and image representations for
computer vision.

Tadayoshi ENOMOTO
Chuo University
Tokyo, Japan
For contributions to the development of integrated circuits
for multimedia.

Thomas ERICSON
Linkoping University
Linkoping, Sweden
For contributions to communications and coding theory and
practice.

Nariman FARVARDIN
University of Maryland
College Park, MD
For contributions to source coding and quantization.

Harold Lee FLESCHER
Raytheon Company
Sudbury, MA
For leadership in the development of radiation hardening
technology.

Lawrence Jerome FOGEL
Natural Selection, Inc.
La Jolla, CA
For the invention of evolutionary computation.

Eric R. FOSSUM
Photobit
La Crescenta, CA
For contributions to image sensors and image processing.

Douglas L. FRANZEN
National Institute of Standards & Technology
Boulder, CO
For contributions to optical fiber characterization
procedures.

Luigi FRATTA
Politecnico di Milano
Milano, Italy
For contributions to packet switching technology.

Victor Samuel FROST
The University of Kansas
Lawrence, KS
For contributions to the simulation, monitoring and control
of communications networks.

Hideo FUKUTOMI
Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd.
Tokyo, Japan
For leadership in optical fiber and cable technologies.

Yoji FURUHAMA
Communications Research Laboratory
Tokyo, Japan
For contributions to and leadership in optical and
millimeter-wave propagation research, especially for its
application to satellite communications.

Costas N. GEORGHIADES
Texas A&M University
College Station, TX
For contributions to the theory of optimum receiver design.

Ira Alan GERSON
Motorola, Inc.
Schaumburg, IL
For contributions to the development of speech coding and
recognition technologies.

Janos John GERTLER
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA
For contributions to process monitoring and diagnosis, and
to its application in automobile engine diagnosis.

Nirmal K. GHAI
MagneTek, Inc.
Lexington, TN
For contributions to the design and application of rotating
electric machinery and for leadership in standards
development and standards harmonization.

Barry K. GILBERT
Mayo Foundation/Mayo Clinic
Rochester, MN
For developments of improved electronic packaging for high
performance gallium arsenide integrated circuits.

Bernd GIROD
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
Erlangen, Germany
For contributions to the theory and practice of video
communication.

Valery Anton GODYAK
OSRAM Sylvania Inc.
Beverly, MA
For contributions to RF discharge physics and its
application to development of new RF light sources.

James P. GORDON
Lucent Technologies
Holmdel, NJ
For major original contributions to physical optics.

Roberto Domenico GRAGLIA
Politecnico di Torino
Torino, Italy
For contributions in the application of numerical techniques
in the studies of electromagnetic structures.

Susan HACKWOOD
University of California, Riverside
Riverside, CA
For leadership in engineering education, for pioneering
partnerships between academia, industry and government, and
for seminal contributions in automation and robotics.

Chang Chieh HANG
National University of Singapore
Singapore
For contributions to the research and development of
advanced control design techniques and to education in
control engineering.

Masahiro HASHIMOTO
Osaka Electro-Communication University
Osaka, Japan
For contributions to electromagnetic theory, especially for
guided-wave optics.

Hooshang HEMAMI
The Ohio State University
Columbus, OH
For contributions to the dynamics, control, and computer
modeling of robotic and human bipedal locomotion systems.

John G.N. HENDERSON
Hitachi America, Ltd.
Princeton, NJ
For contributions to the design and development of high
definition television systems.

Alfred Oliver HERO III
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI
For contributions to the theory and practice of statistical
signal processing, particularly in estimation, detection,
and imaging.

Taketoshi HIBIYA
NEC Corporation
Tsukuba, Japan
For contributions to liquid-phase epitaxial growth of
magnetic garnet films for telecommunication applications.

H. Scott HINTON
University of Colorado
Boulder, CO
For leadership and contribution in the fields of smart pixel
technology and free-space optical interconnects.

Kotaro HIRANO
Kobe University
Kobe, Japan
For contributions to analog and digital signal processing,
and to engineering education.

Yasuo HIRATA
Kokusai Denshin Denwa (KDD) Co.,Ltd.
Tokyo, Japan
For contributions to and leadership in the development of
digital mobile satellite communication systems and research
of their key technologies.

Edward Joseph HOFFMAN
UCLA School of Medicine
Los Angeles, CA
For contributions to the development of Positron Emission
Tomography, particularly in the development of its use for
quantitative measurements.

Robert Lee HORST
Peak Productivity USA
Lancaster, PA
For contributions to computer-controlled manufacturing
processes for consumer and defense products.

James Richard HUDDLE
Litton Guidance & Control Systems Division
Woodland Hills, CA
For contributions to the science of navigation, geodesy and
surveying.

Thomas William HUSSEY
US Air Force Phillips Laboratory
Kirtland AFB, NM
For advances in the understanding and application of fast,
hollow-core, plasma z pinches.

Wen-mei W. HWU
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Urbana, IL
For contributions to high performance compiler and
microarchitecture technologies.

Hisakazu IIZUKA
Toshiba Corporation
Yokohama, Japan
For contributions to the development of the stacked-gate
structure for an electrically alterable PROM.

Katsushi IKEUCHI
University of Tokyo
Tokyo, Japan
For contributions to the advancement of robot vision
technology.

Osamu ISHIHARA
Texas Tech University
Lubbock, TX
For contributions to the discovery of the quasilinear
mechanism of turbulent heating and the understanding of
collective effects of wave-particle interaction in plasma
turbulence.

Khalid Ezz El-Din ISMAIL
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
Yorktown Heights, NY
For development of Si/SiGe materials for high-performance
microwave devices.

Bahram JAVIDI
University of Connecticut
Storrs, CT
For contributions to application of optical techniques for
encryption and security applications.

Frederick John JEFFERS
Eastman Kodak
San Diego, CA
For contributions to magnetic recording physics and the
invention and development of novel magnetic inductive and
magnetoresistive heads.

Niraj K. JHA
Princeton University
Princeton, NJ
For contributions to high-level design and synthesis of
testable VLSI circuits.

Rolf JOHANNESSON
Lund University
Lund, Sweden
For contributions to the understanding and application of
convolutional codes.

William Henry JOYNER, JR.
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
Yorktown Heights, NY
For contributions to the development and application of
practical automated logic synthesis to high-performance VLSI
designs.

Paul Garrett KAMINSKI
Department of Defense
Washington, DC
For pioneering contributions to Stealth/Counter-stealth
technology and its application which fundamentally changed
the nature of warfare and revolutionized design priorities
of both offensive and defensive weapons systems and sensors.

Aggelos K. KATSAGGELOS
Northwestern University
Evanston, IL
For contributions to the theory and application of iterative
image restoration methods.

Joseph KATZ
Symbol Technologies, Inc.
Holtsville, NY
For contributions to the development of optoelectronic
devices and systems for optical communications, remote
sensing, and bar-code reading.

Fred L. KATZMANN
Montclair Scientific Instruments, Inc.
Cedar Grove, NJ
For leadership and innovation in developing a new generation
of cost-effective precision instrumentation.

Arie E. KAUFMAN
SUNY at Stony Brook
Stony Brook, NY
For contributions to and leadership in visualization and
computer graphics.

Marian Piotr KAZMIERKOWSKI
Warsaw University of Technology
Warszawa, Poland
For contribution to research, education and industrial
developments in power electronics and induction motor
control.

Michael Peter KENNEDY
University College Dublin
Dublin, Ireland
For contributions to the theory of neural networks and
nonlinear dynamics, and for leadership in nonlinear circuits
research and education.

Russel John KERKMAN
Allen-Bradley Co.
Mequon, WI
For contributions to the development of
pulse-width-modulated voltage source inverter
drives and field oriented control of induction motors.

Ali KEYHANI
The Ohio State University
Columbus, OH
For development of the system identification method of
synchronous machine modeling and parameter estimation.

Iam-Choon KHOO
Pennsylvania State University
University Park, PA
For contributions to optical, electro-optical and nonlinear
optical phenomena in liquid crystals and their application
in optical devices.

Richard Arthur KIEHL
Stanford University
Stanford, CA
For contributions to heterostructure field-effect
transistors and circuits.

Conilee G. KIRKPATRICK
Hughes Research Laboratories
Malibu, CA
For leadership in the development and manufacturing of III-V
electronic materials and devices and their application to
military and commercial systems.

Ahmed Abdelwahed KISHK
University of Mississippi
University, MS
For contributions to the modeling of symmetrical antennas
and scatterers.

Dennis L. KNEPP
Mission Research Corporation
Monterey, CA
For contributions to understanding the effects of random
ionized media on signal propagation, leading to the
development of mitigation techniques for satellite
communications and radar systems.

Steven Kenneth KOROTKY
Lucent Technologies
Holmdel, NJ
For contributions to integrated-optics and optical
communication, including the development of high-speed
external modulators and their communication applications.

Masamitsu KOSAKI
Toyohashi University of Technology
Toyohashi, Japan
For contributions to the understanding of electrical
insulation characteristics of polymers in the cryogenic
temperature region and the development of extruded polymer
insulated superconducting cable.

Hobart W. KRANER
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Upton, NY
For contributions to the development of nuclear particle
detectors and the understanding of radiation effects in
germanium and silicon detectors.

Bruce H. KROGH
Carnegie Mellon University
Pittsburgh, PA
For contributions to supervisory control and its industrial
applications.

Edward Francis KUESTER
University of Colorado, Boulder
Boulder, CO
For contributions to electromagnetic wave theory and applied
mathematics especially to microstrip structures, propagation
along open waveguide structures and electromagnetic
compatibility.

Anthony KUH
University of Hawaii
Honolulu, HI
For contributions to the analysis of neural network models
and their applications to signal processing.

Stefan K. LAI
Intel Corporation
Santa Clara, CA
For distinguished research on the properties of silicon MOS
interfaces and the development of Flash EPROM Memory.

Jeffrey H. LANG
MIT
Cambridge, MA
For contributions to the design, analysis, estimation, and
control of electromechanical energy conversion and motion
control systems, including novel micro-electromechanical
systems.

Louis J. LANZEROTTI
Lucent Technologies
Murray Hill, NJ
For outstanding contributions to geophysics, space plasma
physics, planetary magnetospheres, and energetic solar
particles.

Mark E. LAW
University of Florida
Gainesville, FL
For contributions to integrated circuit process modeling and
simulation.

Fred N. LEE
University of Oklahoma
Norman, OK
For contributions in scheduling resources for electrical
power systems and in power engineering education.

Sukhan LEE
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Pasadena, CA
For contributions to human-machine systems and intelligent
robots through development of teleoperator control systems
and neural networks.

Wu-Hon Francis LEUNG
Motorola
Arlington Heights, IL
For contributions to operating systems, protocols and
programming methods supporting the development of
distributed systems and multimedia communication
applications.

Nadav LEVANON
Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv, Israel
For contributions to radar signal analysis and detection.

Yehuda LEVIATAN
Technion-Israel Institute of Technology
Haifa, Israel
For contributions to the developments of new computational
techniques for electromagnetic scattering analysis.

Michael Roy LIGHTNER
University of Colorado, Boulder
Boulder, CO
For contributions to the Computer-Aided Design of Integrated
Circuits.

Loren Wendell LINHOLM
National Institute of Standards & Technology
Gaithersburg, MD
For initiating and guiding the development of innovative
microelectronic test-structure based measurement techniques,
and associated parametric test-instrumentation procedures,
for monitoring advanced semiconductor wafer-fabrication
processes and tools.

Simpson LINKE
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY
For a lifetime of dedication to power system education and
leadership in the development of electric-power and
electric-energy systems.

John LITVA
McMaster University
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
For contributions to electromagnetic modelling, microstrip
antennas, beamforming, and propagation, as well as for
technical leadership in the areas of low-angle radar
tracking, microwaves, and signal processing.

Robert Donald LORENZ
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Madison, WI
For developments in the application of modern control design
theory to ac machine drives.

Yong-Zai LU
Bethlehem Steel Co.
Chesterton, IN
Contributions to modeling and intelligent control of
industrial systems.

Mohammad MADIHIAN
NEC
Kawasaki, Japan
For contribution to the design and development of microwave
as well as millimeter-wave solid state monolithic integrated
circuits for personal computing and wireless networking
systems.

Asad M. MADNI
BEI Sensors and Systems Company
Sylmar, CA
For contributions to the design and development of
instrumentation for electronic warfare systems.

Herman Emile MAES
IMEC: Interuniversity Microelectronics Center
Leuven, Belgium
For contributions in the field on non-volatile silicon
memory devices and MOS reliability physics.

Behnam B. MALAKOOTI
Case Western Reserve University
Cleveland, OH
For contributions to the solution and applications of
discrete optimization problems.

Nelson MARTINS
Centro de Pesquisas de Energia Eletrica - CEPEL
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
For fundamental developments in eigensolution algorithms and
small signal stability analysis for the control of large
scale power systems.

Yasuo MATSUYAMA
Waseda University
Tokyo, Japan
For contributions to learning algorithms with competition.

Peter Grant MCLAREN
University of Manitoba
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
For contributions to the development of digital relays and
real time simulators for testing relays.

Jean MENEZ
Nice University
Nice, France
For the development of noise masking techniques in low-bit
rate speech coding.

Jaishankar M. MENON
IBM Almaden Research Center
San Jose, CA
For contributions to the architecture, algorithms, and
implementation of disk array storage systems.

Curtis Robert MENYUK
University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC)
Baltimore, MD
For contributions to the mathematics and computation of
light propagation in nonlinear and dispersive optical
fibers.

Alan MILLER
University of St. Andrews
St. Andrews, Fife, Scotland
For contributions to the understanding of ultrafast
phenomena in semiconductor materials and nonlinear
optoelectronic devices.

James G. MILLER
Washington University
St. Louis, MO
For contributions to and leadership in stealth technology
and its applications to military aircraft systems.

Lee Stephen MILLER
Applied Science Associates, Inc.
Pendleton, SC
For contributions to satellite-borne radar remote sensing of
topographic and oceanographic observations.

Howard MORAFF
National Science Foundation
Arlington, VA
For technical leadership in fostering basic research in
robotics and computer vision.

Gerard Albert MOUROU
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI
For contributions to chirp pulse amplification of ultrashort
optical pulses and electrooptic sampling techniques for high
speed signal characterization.

William James MOYLAN
Moylan Engineering Associates Inc.
Dearborn, MI
For leadership in the development of standards for electric
power distribution for industrial plants.

James Paul MUCCIOLI
Chrysler Corporation
Auburn Hills, MI
For contributions to integrated circuit design practices to
minimize electromagnetic interference.

Hans-Hellmut NAGEL
Fraunhofer-Institut IITB
Karlsruhe, Germany
For research into the analysis and interpretation of
digitized real-world image sequences and for theoretical and
experimental contributions to motion analysis from image
sequences.

Yoshihisa NAKAMURA
Tohoku University
Sendai, Japan
For contributions and leadership in the field of
high-density magnetic recording and the basic development of
perpendicular magnetic recording.

Michel Sobhy NAKHLA
Carleton University
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
For contributions to the development of advanced CAD
techniques for microwave circuits and high-speed
interconnects.

Hugh Owen NASH, JR.
Smith Seckman Reid, Inc.
Nashville, TN
For leadership in the development of codes and standards for
electric systems in healthcare facilities and for
contributions to the application of electrical technology to
those facilities.

Stuart Owen NELSON
U.S. Department of Agriculture, ARS
Athens, GA
For contributions to the measurement of radio frequency and
microwave dielectric properties of agricultural materials.

Shogo NISHIDA
Osaka University
Toyonaka, Osaka, Japan
For contributions to emergency control schemes for the
stabilization of power systems and to power engineering
education.

Takao NISHITANI
NEC Information Technology Laboratories
Kawasaki, Japan
For contributions to the development of LSI chip
architectures on digital signal processors.

Istvan NOVAK
Technical University of Budapest
Budapest, Hungary
For contributions to the theory and practice of
radio-frequency monitoring techniques, and to the
measurement and simulation of high-speed digital systems.

Burks OAKLEY II
University of Illinois
Urbana, IL
For work in the development, implementation, and advocacy of
asynchronous learning networks in electrical and computer
engineering education.

Carlton M. OSBURN
N.C. State University
Raleigh, NC
For contributions to silicon technology including
self-aligned silicides, dielectric breakdown, and hot
electron phenomena.

Kanji OTSUKA
Meisei University
Tokyo, Japan
For contribution to Ceramic Multilayer Substrate, IC and LSI
Packaging Technology and Multichip Module Technology.

Ramon PALLAS-ARENY
Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya (UPC)
Barcelona, Spain
For contribution to medical and electronic instrumentation
and biomedical sensors.

Andrzej Marian PAWLAK
Generals Motors R&D Center
Warren, MI
For the development of novel yet cost-effective and
highly-manufacturable electromechanical devices that have
provided or enabled new features to be added to
automotive products.

William Abraham PEARLMAN
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Troy, NY
For contributions to the theory and practice of source
coding and image compression.

John Burling PEATMAN
Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, GA
For contributions as an educator in the design of digital
systems.

Roger L. PETERSON
Motorola Inc.
Arlington Heights, IL
For contributions to spread spectrum communication system
design and personal communication systems.

Wolfgang PFEIFFER
Technical University of Darmstadt
Darmstadt, Germany
For achievements in the field of Ultra High Speed
Diagnostics in Electrical Insulation.

Rik PINTELON
Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Brussels, Belgium
For fundamental research in frequency domain system
identification and its application in instrumentation,
control, and signal processing.

Mark Richard PINTO
Lucent Technologies
Murray Hill, NJ
For contributions to computer-aided design of electronic
devices.

Majid RABBANI
Eastman Kodak Research Laboratories
Rochester, NY
For the development of image compression technology and
products.

Saifur RAHMAN
Virginia Tech
Blacksburg, VA
For contributions to electric power engineering education.

Krithi RAMAMRITHAM
University of Massachusetts
Amherst, MA
For contributions to the theory and design of real-time
systems.

Ganti Prasada RAO
Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur
Kharagpur, India
For development of continuous time identification
techniques.

Theodore Scott RAPPAPORT
VA Polytechnic Inst. & State Univ.
Blacksburg, VA
For research contributions and educational leadership in the
field of wireless communications.

Mohamed Mamdouh RASHWAN
Manitoba Hydro
Rosser, Manitoba, Canada
For technical leadership and contributions to the design,
commissioning and operation of HVDC transmission systems.

Narayan S. RAU
New England Power Pool
Holyoke, MA
For contributions to the techniques of reliability and
production cost computations in electric power systems.

Steven Keith ROGERS
Battelle Memorial Institution
Columbus, OH
For design, implementation and fielding of neural solutions
to automatic target recognition.

Rob Arthur RUTENBAR
Carnegie Mellon University
Pittsburgh, PA
For contributions to computer aided design tools for
automatic synthesis and layout of analog and mixed-signal
integrated circuits.

Ali SABERI
Washington State University
Pullman, WA
For contributions to singular perturbation theory and
nonlinear control.

Takao SAKAI
Musashi Institute of Technology
Tokyo, Japan
For the analysis of deterioration of insulating materials
caused by partial discharge and corona discharge in gases.

Hiroyuki SAKAKI
University of Tokyo
Tokyo, Japan
For seminal contributions to quantum effects in
semiconductor nanostructures and devices.

Karem A. SAKALLAH
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI
For contributions to the modeling, analysis, and
optimization of digital system timing.

Vincent Victor SALOMONSON
NASA, Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, MD
For leadership and research in spaceborne technology and
remote sensing.

Maurice Irving SANCER
Northrop Grumman
Pico Rivera, CA
For contributions to electromagnetic scattering analysis and
experiment.

Asle SCHEI
TransiNor Technology
Trondheim, Norway
For development and design of overvoltage protection systems
and contribution to international standardization.

Robert Anthony SCHLUETER
Michigan State University
East Lansing, MI
For contributions to the theoretical and practical
understanding of power system voltage instability.

Robert A. SCRANTON
IBM
San Jose, CA
For leadership in the development and manufacturing of
magnetoresistive heads for disk drives.

Homayoun SERAJI
NASA-Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Pasadena, CA
For contributions to the control of robotic systems for
space applications.

Gadiel SEROUSSI
Hewlett-Packard Laboratories
Palo Alto, CA
For contributions to the theory and practice of error
correction and data compression algorithms and
architectures.

Rudolf Patrick SEVERNS
Springtime Enterprises, Inc.
Cottage Grove, OR
For contributions to the understanding and development of
high frequency power converters.

Lui SHA
Software Engineering Institute
Pittsburgh, PA
For technical leadership and research contributions which
enabled the transformation of real time computing practice
from ad hoc process to an engineering process based on
analytical methods.

Joseph SHAMIR
Technion-Israel Institute of Technology
Haifa, Israel
For major contributions to the theory, analysis, and design
of electro-optic signal processing systems.


Gerald Bernard SHEBLE
Iowa State University
Ames, IA
For contributions to the development of Auction Methods as
an alternative to power system optimization methods
addressing the de-regulation of the electric utility
business.

M. Ayman SHIBIB
Lucent Technologies
Reading, PA
For contributions to the device physics of heavy doping
effects and the development of high voltage integrated
circuits for telecommunications switching systems.

Norio SHIRATORI
Tohoku University
Sendai-shi, Miyagi-ken, Japan
For contributions to the theory and practice of advanced
computer networks.

Thomas W. SIGMON
Lawrence Livermore National Lab
Livermore, CA
For the development and application of ion implantation
technology and for contributions to semiconductor damage
annealing.

Dick Bedford SIMMONS
Texas A&M University
College Station, TX
For the development of software models, metrics, and
agent-based tools for software project management.

Naresh Kumar SINHA
McMaster University
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
For contributions to education and research in industrial
electronics and control instrumentation.

Marion Joseph SOILEAU
University of Central Florida
Orlando, FL
For leadership in developing CREOL as a leading research and
educational institute in lasers and optics.

Wayne Eric STARK
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI
For contributions to the theory and practice of coding and
modulation in spread-spectrum communication systems.

Hideo SUNAMI
Hitachi, Ltd.
Tokyo, Japan
For contributions to the development of trench-capacitor
DRAM cells and ultra-high density DRAMs.

Hirobumi TAKANASHI
Fujitsu Laboratories, Ltd.
Kawasaki, Japan
For leadership and contributions in the development of
optical semiconductor devices and transmission systems.

Andrew S. TANENBAUM
Vrije Universiteit
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
For outstanding contributions to research and education in
computer networks and operating systems.

Kenji TANIGUCHI
Osaka University
Osaka, Japan
For contributions to the development of MOS device
fabrication processes, particularly dielectric breakdown and
oxygen-enhanced diffusion.

Yuan TAUR
IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center
Yorktown Heights, NY
For outstanding contributions to advanced CMOS technology.

Hemant K. THAPAR
Datapath Systems, Inc.
Santa Clara, CA
For contributions to the theory, development, and commercial
deployment of advanced communication methods in data storage
and transmission.

Andre L. TITS
University of Maryland
College Park, MD
For contributions to optimization-based design and robust
control.

Yoh'ichi TOHKURA
ATR Human Info. Processing Res. Laboratories
Kyoto, Japan
For leadership in collaborative research on human-machine
processing.

Duane Raymond TORGERSON
Western Area Power Administration
Golden, CO
For contributions to the field of empirical software
engineering.

Patrick R. TRISCHITTA
TYCO Submarine Systems, Ltd.
Holmdel, NJ
For contributions to the development and worldwide
deployment of undersea fiber optic communication systems.

Moshe TUR
Tel-Aviv University
Tel-Aviv, Israel
For contributions to the theory and practice of laser phase
noise management in fiber optic lightwave systems for
sensing, signal processing and communication.

Korada Renu UMASHANKAR
University of Illinois at Chicago
Chicago, IL
For contributions to the development of computational
electromagnetics in the area of integral equation methods
and finite-difference time-domain techniques.

Alfredo VAGATI
Politecnico Di Torino
Torino, Italy
For contributions to the research, design and application of
high performance synchronous reluctance drives.

Robert Alexander VEITCH
Veitch Transformer Engineering Services
Thornhill, Ontario, Canada
For leadership in the development and design of very large
and extra high voltage transformers, shunt reactors and
associated equipment.

George Cheeran VERGHESE
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA
For contributions to frequency-selective dynamic modeling,
stability analysis and control in power electronics and
power systems.

Robert McNally WALP
General Communication, Inc.
Anchorage, AK
For leadership in the development of small earth station
satellite systems for telecommunications.

Shih-Yuan WANG
Hewlett-Packard Company
Palo Alto, CA
For research in and development of photonic high speed
detectors and surface emitting lasers.

Pramod WARTY
AT&T 
Middletown, NJ
For contributions to software systems in telecommunication
switching and network management.

Denis Conrad WEBB
Naval Research Laboratory
Washington, DC
For leadership in the development and application of
microwave ferrite devices.

Michael Charles WICKS
US Air Force Rome Laboratory
Rome, NY
For contributions to adaptive airborne signal processing.

Jay G. WILPON
AT&T Research Labs
Murray Hill, NJ
For leadership in the development of automatic speech
recognition algorithms.

William J. WILSON
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Pasadena, CA
For contributions to microwave radiometry for radio
astronomy and remote sensing applications.

Joel L. WOLF
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
Yorktown Heights, NY
For contributions to the optimization of scheduling and
resource allocation in computer systems.

Wayne Hendrix WOLF
Princeton University
Princeton, NJ
For contributions to Hardware/Software Co-Design.

Chung-Yu WU
National Chiao Tung University
Hsin-Chu City, Taiwan
For contributions to the implementation of analog neural
network integrated circuits.

Yutaka YAMAMOTO
Kyoto University
Kyoto, Japan
For contributions to the theory of sampled-data systems,
digital control, and infinite-dimensional systems.

David D. YAO
Columbia University
New York, NY
For contributions to the studies of the mathematical
structures and control of discrete-event systems and related
manufacturing applications.

Hiroshi YASUDA
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp. (NTT)
Kanagawa, Japan
For contributions to the international standardization
activities on video coding technologies and the research and
development of visual communications and multimedia
communications systems.

Pen-Chung YEW
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, MN
For contributions to the design of high-performance
shared-memory multiprocessors and their parallelizing
compilers.

Karl Sigfrid YNGVESSON
University of Massachusetts
Amherst, MA
For contributions to the development of millimeter wave
devices and systems.

Katsuichi YOTSUMOTO
NTT Building Technology Institute
Tokyo, Japan
For contributions to highly efficient and reliable
telecommunications energy systems.

Jonathan David YOUNG
The Ohio State University
Columbus, OH
For contributions to ground penetrating radar.

Ya-Qin ZHANG
David Sarnoff Research Center
Princeton, NJ
For contribution to and leadership in the development of
digital video compression and communications technology,
standards, and products.

Willy ZWAENEPOEL
Rice University
Houston, TX
For contribution to the design and implementation of
distributed shared memory systems.


The IEEE Fellow Committee is pleased to announce a new procedure for the
release of data regarding newly-elected Fellows.

The slate of IEEE Fellows for the calendar year 1998 will be available
electronically after 21 November.  This information may be obtained by 
sending email messages to the following auto retrievable text files:

fel98-1@ieee.org for Candidates with family names beginning with A-L
fel98-2@ieee.org for Candidates with family names beginning with M-Z

In keeping with established practice, the newly-elected Fellows and their
nominators will be notified via first class mail prior to the release of 
information to the general public.

If you have any questions regarding this new procedure, please contact 
the IEEE Fellow Committee Staff Secretary:  tel. 212.705.8211
email: 

Sincerely,
Sandy Schumacher

****************************************************************************
Ms. Sandy Schumacher				Tel:  732.562.3843
IEEE						Fax:  732.981.9019
Fellow Program Coordinator			Email:  s.schumacher@ieee.org
P.O. Box 1331 - 445 Hoes Lane			www:  www.ieee.org
Piscataway, NJ 08855-1331		
 	       	IEEE: Networking the World
*****************************************************************************

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