All posts by PetrosB

IEEE SPS Elections

As some of you might know, I am running for member-at-large in this IEEE SPS election cycle. I am very energized to continue contributing to the signal processing society, which I consider my professional extended family. As the general co-chair of ICASSP2023 and a former regional director-at-large for regions 1-6, I have experience and ideas to help SPS move forward. There are several challenges the society faces in the near future, on which I am eager to work on:

  • Providing true scientific and professional value to members, in a world where competing options are vying for our attention.
  • Decreasing attendance for many SPS conferences and workshops, including ICIP, while others are flourishing (e.g., ICASSP).
  • Increasing importance of industry in our field, which the society needs to embrace and engage successfully.
  • Rapidly shifting publication environment, moving to open access, rapidly increasing volume of submissions, and challenges to find responsive and high-quality reviewers.
  • Emergence of AI both as a dominant research area and as a tool in all aspects of the society’s activity.
  • Global trends against open borders and globalization, challenging all of our functions.

Our community has given me so much, and I am eager to pay it forward for all our members. If you have any questions or suggestions, feel free to contact me.

Whether you think I am the right person for this position or not, I encourage you to vote by visiting https://eballot4.votenet.com/IEEE. The voting period ends December 4, 4pm ET, so please vote before that. Your voice matters and this is one of the best ways to express it. Please also encourage your colleagues and your students to vote.

MERL’s Sensing Team is hiring

We are happy to announce a new full-time opening in MERL’s Computational Sensing team. As I always like to mention, MERL is a great place to work. We have a very collaborative and diverse research environment, focused in exciting fundamental research.

We are looking for well-qualified candidates in the broad area of computational sensing. As a member of our team, you will have the opportunity to explore a wide variety of problems, expand the range of problems you are working on, and help shape our research agenda.

If you are interested, please apply through our online application form. If you know someone who is interested, let them know!

New Openings at MERL

We are happy to announce several new openings for MERL’s sensing team. As I always like to mention, MERL is a great place to work, and has a great research environment. We are a very diverse lab, with expertise in a large variety of disciplines. Our relatively small size enables very fruitful interaction among us. Even within the computational sensing team, the diversity is evident in these openings.

One of the openings is for a postdoctoral researcher in signal processing, with particular emphasis on signal acquisition and active sensing technologies. We are looking for a person to assist us in a number of very interesting sensing projects, with several publications and patents expected. The posting here:

http://www.merl.com/employment/employment.php#MM21

We also have several, more specific, internship openings in sensing, processing and control, all listed below. Interns are typically involved in one project, guided by one or more researchers. We expect that the work will lead to at least one publication and/or patent for each internship.

http://www.merl.com/internship/openings.php?tags=MM1008&tags=MM1017&tags=MM1010&tags=MM1006

Of course, there are several internship openings in other areas, including speech, vision, control, and machine learning, which you can find here:

http://www.merl.com/internship/openings.php

and postdoc/full-time positions here:

http://www.merl.com/employment/employment.php

Please spread the word and apply!