IEEE W.R.G. Baker Award

IEEE W.R.G. Baker Award
Awarded for The most outstanding paper reporting original work in any of the IEEE Transactions, Journals, Magazines, or Proceedings
Reward The award consists of a certificate and honorarium
First awarded 1956
Official website www.ieee.org/about/awards/recognitions/baker.html

IEEE W.R.G. Baker Award provided by the Institute of Radio Engineers (IRE), was created in 1956 from a donation from Walter R. G. Baker (1892-1960) to the IRE. The award continued to be awarded by the Board of Directors of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), after the IRE organization merged into the IEEE in 1963. Recipients receive a certificate and honorarium "for the most outstanding paper reporting original work" in one of the IEEE publications, including the transactions, journals, proceedings, and magazines of the IEEE Societies.[1]

Recipients

The following people have received the award:[2][3]

  • 2015 - A.Latif,Thomas L. Marzetta[4]
  • 2014 - Stephen J. Wright,[5] Robert Nowak[6] and Mário A. T. Figueiredo[7]
  • 2013 - Erdal Arikan, Bilkent University, Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Ankara, Turkey
  • 2012 - Gerhard Krieger, Alberto Moreira, Hauke Fiedler, Irena Hajnsek, Marian Werner, Marwan Younic, Manfred Zink
  • 2002-2011 — No award
  • 2001 — Keshab K. Parhi, University of Minnesota, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Minneapolis, MN
  • 2000 — A. Lee Swindlehurst, Brigham Young University, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Provo, Utah and P Stoica, Uppsala University, Systems and Control Group, Uppsala, Sweden
  • 1999 — Wayne D. Grover, Network and Systems Research, Telecommunications Research Laboratories, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
  • 1998 — Paul F. McManamon, Terry A Dorschner, David L. Corkum, Larry J. Friedman, Douglas S. Hobbs, Michael Holz, Sergey Liberman, Huy Q. Nguyen, Daniel P. Resler, Richard C. Sharp, and Edward A. Watson
  • 1997 — Rajiv Ramaswami and Kumar N. Sivarajan, IBM/T. J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, NY
  • 1996 — Will E. Leland, Walter Willinger, and Daniel V. Wilson, Bellcore, Morristown, NJ and Murad Taqqu, Boston University, Boston, MA
  • 1995 — Petros Maragos, Georgia Inst. of Technology, James F. Kaiser, Rutgers University, and Thomas F. Quatieri, MIT - Lincoln Laboratory
  • 1994 — Michael M. Green, Stony Brook, NY, and Alan N. Willson, Jr., Los Angeles, CA
  • 1993 — Narasimham Vempati, Minneapolis, MN, and Ilya W. Slutsker, Minneapolis, MN, and William F. Tinney, Portland, OR
  • 1992 — Alon Orlitsky, Murray Hill, NJ
  • 1991 — John C. Doyle, Pasadena, CA, Keith Glover, Cambridge, England, Bruce A. Francis, Toronto, Ont., Canada, and Pramod P. Khargonekar, Ann Arbor, MI
  • 1990 — Allen C. Newell, Boulder, CO
  • 1989 — Randal E. Bryant, Pittsburgh, PA
  • 1988 — Benjamin Kedem, College Park, MD
  • 1987 — James L. Massey, Zurich, Switzerland, and Peter Mathys, Boulder, CO
  • 1986 — Adi Shamir, Rehovet, Israel
  • 1985 — John W. Adams, and Alan N. Willson, Jr., Los Angeles, CA
  • 1984 — Yannis Tsividis, Columbia University, New York, NY
  • 1983 — Ryszard Malewski, Chinh T. Nguyen, Hydro-Québec Institute of Research, Varennes, Canada, Kurt Feser, Haefely & Co., Ltd., Basel, Switzerland, and Nils Hylten Cavallius, Center Pesquisas Energia Electrica, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • 1982 — Carl O. Bozler and Gary D. Alley, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lexington, MA
  • 1981 — Timothy C. May, INTEL Corporation, Aloha, OR and Murray H. Woods, INTEL Corporation, Santa Clara, CA
  • 1980 — David J. Allstot, Texas Instruments Incorporated, Dallas, TX, Paul R. Gray, University of California, Berkeley, CA, Gordon M. Jacobs, Dolby Laboratories, Inc., San Francisco, CA, Robert W. Brodersen, University of California, Berkeley, CA
  • 1979 — Stephen W. Director, Carnegie-Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, and Gary D. Hachtel, University of Denver, Denver, CO
  • 1978 — James S. Kresge and Eugene C. Sakshaug, General Electric Company, Pittsfield, MA, and Stanley A. Miske, Jr., General Electric Company, Schenectady, NY
  • 1977 — Manfred R. Schroeder, Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ
  • 1976 — Robert W. Keyes, IBM, Hopewell Junction, NY
  • 1975 — Stewart E. Miller, Enrique A. J. Marcatili, and Tingye Li, Bell Laboratories, Holmdel, NJ
  • 1974 — David B. Large, Conservation Foundation, Washington, DC, and Lawrence Ball and Arnold J. Farstad, Westinghouse Georesearch Laboratory, Boulder, CO
  • 1973 — Leon O. Chua, University of California, Berkeley, CA
  • 1972 — Dirk J. Kuizenga and Anthony E. Siegman, Stanford University, Stanford, CA
  • 1971 — Andrew H. Boberck, Robert F. Fischer, Anthony J. Perneski, J. P. Remeika, and L. G. Van Uitert, Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., Murray Hill, NJ
  • 1970 — George J. Friedman, Northrop Electro-Mechanical Division, Palos Verdes Peninsula, CA and Cornelius T. Leondes, University of California, Los Angeles, CA
  • 1969 — Tosiro Koga, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan
  • 1968 — Jonny Andersen, and Harry B. Lee, MIT, Cambridge, MA
  • 1967 — Dean E. McCumber and Alan G. Chynoweth, Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., Murray Hill, NJ
  • 1966 — Robert G. Gallager, MIT, Cambridge, MA
  • 1965 — Dante C. Youla, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, Farmingdale, NY
  • 1964 — Donald L. White, Bell Telephone Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ
  • 1963 — Leonard Lewin
  • 1962 — Marvin Chodorow[8] and Tore Wessel-Berg
  • 1961 — Manfred Clynes, Rockland State Hospital, Orangeburg, NY
  • 1960 — E. J. Nalos
  • 1959 — R. D. Thronton
  • 1958 — R. L. Kyhl and H. F. Webster
  • 1957 — R. J. Kircher of the Hughes Aircraft Company, and R. L. Trent and D. R. Fewer of the Bell Telephone Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ

References

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