The Center for Education and Research in Information Assurance and Security (CERIAS)

The Center for Education and Research in
Information Assurance and Security (CERIAS)

CERIAS Faculty Receive New Designations, New Dean

Tue, November 19, 2002General

CERIAS Faculty Andrew Weiner and Edward Delp have received new designations, while Jeffery Vitter has been named the new Dean of the School of Science.

Weiner, whose research focuses on ultrafast optical signal processing and high-speed optical communications, is the Scifres Distinguished Professor in Electrical and Computer Engineering. He is especially well known for pioneering the field of femtosecond pulse shaping, which enables a generation of nearly arbitrary ultrafast optical waveforms according to user specification. This technology is now used worldwide for research on laser control of photochemical reactions. Five U.S. patents are held under his name.

Weiner has published four book chapters and 120 journal articles. He has been author or co-author of more than 200 conference papers, including approximately 60 invited conference talks. He also is a board of governors member and secretary/treasurer for the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers’ Lasers and Electro-optics Society (IEEE LEOS). Weiner’s career awards include the International Commission on Optics Prize in 1997, the IEEE LEOS William Streifer Scientific Achievement Award in 1999 and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Research Award for Senior U.S. Scientists in 2000.

He earned his bachelor’s, master’s and doctorate degrees in electrical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1979, 1981 and 1984, respectively. He was awarded the 1984 Hertz Foundation Doctoral Thesis Prize for his thesis on femtosecond pulse compression and measurement of femtosecond dephasing in condensed matter. In 1984, Weiner joined Bellcore where he conducted research on ultrafast optics. In 1989, he became manager of the Ultrafast Optics and Optical Signal Processing Research District.

Weiner assumed his current position at Purdue in 1992, and in 1996 he also began serving as the director of graduate admissions for the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering.

Edward Delp has been appointed the Silicon Valley Professor in Electrical and Computer Engineering.  Delp’s research interests include image and video compression, multimedia security, medical imaging, multimedia systems, communication and information theory. Various companies and government agencies consulted Delp on topics such as image processing, robot vision, pattern recognition and secure communications. Delp, who has been at Purdue since 1984, also has published more than 250 papers.

In 2000 he was selected a distinguished lecturer of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Signal Processing Society. Delp, who also is a professor of biomedical engineering, is a fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and a fellow of the Society for Imaging Science and Technology.

Delp earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Cincinnati in 1973 and 1975, respectively, and a doctorate from Purdue in 1979. In May 2002, he received an honorary doctor of technology degree from the Tampere University of Technology in Finland.

Vitter most recently was the Gilbert, Louis and Edward Lehrman Professor of Computer Science at Duke University, where he served as chair of the Department of Computer Science from 1993 to 2001. He also was co-director and a founding member of Duke’s Center for Geometric and Biological Computing. He is an adjunct faculty member at Tulane University, and was previously on the faculty for 13 years at Brown University.

He is on the board of directors of the Computing Research Association, where he co-chairs the Government Affairs Committee. Vitter has served as chair, vice-chair and member-at-large of the Special Interest Group on Algorithms and Computation Theory of the world’s largest computer professional organization, the Association for Computing Machinery.

Vitter is a Guggenheim Fellow, an ACM Fellow, an IEEE Fellow, a National Science Foundation Presidential Young Investigator, a Fulbright Scholar and an IBM Faculty Development awardee. He has popularized the field of external memory algorithms, where the goal is to exploit locality in order to alleviate the I/O communication bottleneck that arises when processing huge quantities of data. He also works extensively on data compression, database optimization, average-case and randomized analysis and prediction. He has more than 200 publications.

He received his bachelor’s degree in mathematics in 1977 from Notre Dame, his doctorate in computer science in 1980 from Stanford University, and he expects to receive an MBA from the Fuqua School of Business at Duke University this year.

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