search

UMD     This Site






The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) has announced that Professor Alexander Barg (ECE/ISR) is the 2024 recipient of its Richard W. Hamming Medal “for contributions to the theory of error-correcting codes and their applications in distributed storage, non-volatile memory, and digital fingerprinting.”

The Richard W. Hamming Medal, established in 1986, is the highest IEEE-wide award for exceptional contributions to information sciences, systems and technology. It honors Dr. Richard W. Hamming, who had a central role in the development of computer and computing science, and whose many significant contributions in the area of information science include his error-correcting codes. The medal is sponsored by Qualcomm.

The medal is given annually to an individual or to teams of up to three members for exceptional contributions to information sciences, systems and technology. The scope includes information transmission, coding, storage, and recovery. Subject areas include information theory, coding theory, data communication, computer networks, data storage and retrieval, and image and speech understanding.

Barg is one of 42 recipients of the medal since its establishment. He will be honored on May 3, 2024, at the IEEE Honors Ceremony in Boston.

His current research projects include NSF funding for “Quantum LDPC codes: structure and logical operations” (2023), “Coding-theoretic methods in discrepancy and energy optimization, with applications” (2021), and “From Storage Codes to Recoverable Systems” (2021).

Barg was elected a Fellow of IEEE in 2007. Previously, he won the IEEE Information Theory Society Paper Award in 2015 and the IEEE Communications Society Data Storage Committee Best Paper Award (with Min Ye) in 2017.



Related Articles:
Barg is PI for new quantum LDPC codes NSF grant
New quantum framework yields generalizations of bosonic ‘cat codes’
Dana Dachman-Soled is Program Chair for ITC 2022
Narayan receives NSF funding for shared information work
Forthcoming information-theoretic cryptography book co-written by alum Tyagi and former visitor Watanabe
Five Clark School authors part of new 'Age of Information' book
Thoughts from Rance Cleaveland on his time at the National Science Foundation
Alum Ahmed Arafa wins NSF CAREER Award
$1M NSF award supports reimagining cryptography in a post-quantum world
An information theoretic approach to improving group infection testing

November 30, 2023


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Srivastava Named Inaugural Director of Semiconductor Initiatives and Innovation

State-of-the-Art 3D Nanoprinter Now at UMD

UMD, Partners Receive $31M for Semiconductor Research

Two NSF Awards for ECE Alum Michael Zuzak (Ph.D. ’22)

Applications Open for Professor and Chair of UMD's Department of Materials Science and Engineering

Ghodssi Honored With Gaede-Langmuir Award

Milchberg and Wu named Distinguished University Professors

New features on ingestible capsule will deliver targeted drugs to better treat IBD, Crohn’s disease

Forty years of MEMS research at the Hilton Head Workshop

Baturalp Buyukates (ECE Ph.D. ’21) Honored by IEEE ComSoc

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home