Aazhang earns Finnish professorship
Behnaam Aazhang, the J.S. Abercrombie Professor and chairman of the
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, has earned a Finnish
Distinguished Professorship under a competitive new program by the
Academy of Finland and Tekes, the Finnish funding agency for technology
and innovation.
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Aazhang
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Aazhang’s project on flexible wireless communication systems is
one of only 24 projects funded through the Finland Distinguished
Professor Program (FiDiPro), the goal of which is to raise the level of
scientific and technological knowledge and know-how in Finland and to
add a more international element to the Finnish research system.
During the five-year appointment, Aazhang will work with Matti
Latva-aho, project leader in Finland and professor for digital
transmission techniques at the University of Oulu in Finland, to
develop technologies for future wireless communication systems. The
work will cover all the relevant layers of the open system interface
model as well as related technologies, like radio channels, transceiver
techniques, transmission techniques, medium access control, radio
resource management and Internet protocol over wireless systems. The
goal is to develop technology in the areas of decentralized and
self-organizing network topologies and operatorless radio access
network concepts, focusing on cognitive radio technologies that apply
to broadband wireless access solutions, like mobile phones and laptop
computers, short-range communication devices, and body area networks
used in medical applications.
“This appointment strengthens our link with existing relationships
to one of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering’s
major research collaborators, Nokia, as well as Finnish
universities,” said Aazhang, who is no stranger to Finland. He has
been a visiting professor at the Telecommunications Laboratory at
University of Oulu in Finland, and at Nokia, the Finland-based world
leader in mobile communications.
FiDiPro aims to promote high-quality scientific research with
long-term funding, similar to the United States’ National Science
Foundation. In addition to reinforcing an already robust research
network, FiDiPro aims to give Finnish research an increased
international profile, as well as a new kind of international
cooperation between pure research and research-and-development
activities of private enterprises.
The first projects are expected to begin in early 2007.