John S. Baras
John
S. Baras holds a joint appointment as professor in the department
of electrical and computer engineering and the Institute for
Systems Research. He was the founding director of ISR, which
is one of the first six National Science Foundation engineering
research centers. Dr. Baras is the Lockheed Martin Chair in Systems
Engineering and is the founding and current director of the Center
for Hybrid and Satellite Communication Networks, a NASA commercial
space center. He also serves as a faculty member of the university's
Interdisciplinary Program in Applied Mathematics and an affiliate
professor in the Computer Science Department.
Dr. Baras’ research
interests include scaleable multicast security; integrated management
of hybrid communication networks;
modeling and performance evaluation of large broadband hybrid networks;
fast internet over heterogeneous (wireless-wireline) networks;
manufacturing process selection for electromechanical products;
intelligent control; wavelets; robust speaker identification; low
complexity, high fidelity, low rate speech coding; image processing
and understanding; learning clustering algorithms and classification;
distributed control (or decision) systems; stochastic dynamic model
building; stochastic control and scheduling; real-time sequential
detection and estimation; computer-aided control systems design;
queuing systems; quantum communications; nonlinear systems; and
radar systems modeling and performance evaluation and distributed
parameter systems.
A Fellow of the IEEE, Dr. Baras has served the organization in
various leadership positions. He also serves on the editorial boards
of numerous mathematics and engineering journals and book series,
and consults extensively with industry and government on various
automation and telecommunication problems. He is the recipient
of two Invention of the Year awards from the University of Maryland,
holds two patents, and has received many awards for his research
and publications. Dr. Baras received his B.S. in electrical engineering
from the National Technical University of Athens, Greece, and the
M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Applied Math from Harvard University.
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