Biing-Hwang (Fred) Juang

Biing Hwang "Fred" Juang (Chinese name: 莊炳湟) is a communication and information scientist, best known for his work in speech coding, speech recognition and acoustic signal processing. He joined Georgia Institute of Technology in 2002 as Motorola Foundation Chair Professor in the School of Electrical & Computer Engineering.[1][2]

Life and career

He earned his education at University of California, Santa Barbara. He did research on vocal tract modeling at Speech Communications Research Laboratory (SCRL) with Hisashi Wakita and then joined Signal Technology, Inc. (STI) in 1979, while still a Ph.D. student at UCSB (Advisor: A.H. Gray, Jr.), to work on a number of Government-sponsored research projects.[3] In 1982, he moved to the U.S. east coast to join Bell Laboratories. His work includes development of vector quantization for voice applications, voice coders at extremely low bit rates (800 bit/s and 300 bit/s), robust vocoders for satellite communications, fundamental algorithms in signal modeling for automatic speech recognition, hidden Markov models, segmental clustering algorithms, discriminative methods in pattern recognition and machine learning, stereo- and multi-phonic teleconferencing, and a number of voice-enabled interactive communication services. Aside from various algorithms that are in widespread use today, he is also accredited with the conceptual breakthrough of direct error minimization for pattern recognition, which substantially augments the century-old methodology of Thomas Bayes' distribution estimation approach. He was Director of Acoustics and Speech Research at Bell Labs in late 1990s. He joined Georgia Tech in 2002.

Awards and recognitions

  • Research Excellence Award, The Pan Wen Yuan Foundation, 2017.
  • IEEE Field Award, James L. Flanagan Medal in Speech and Audio Processing, 2014
  • Charter Fellow, National Academy of Inventors, 2013
  • Outstanding Technical Achievement Award, Chinese Institute of Engineers, 2007
  • Elected Academician, Academia Sinica, 2006
  • Elected Member, National Academy of Engineering (NAE), 2004
  • Bell Labs Fellow, 1999
  • Fellow, IEEE, 1991
  • Technical Achievement Award, IEEE Signal Processing Society, 1998
  • Third Millennium Medal, IEEE, 2000, for contributions to the field of speech processing and communications
  • Editor-in-Chief, IEEE Transactions on Speech and Audio Processing, 1996–2002
  • Distinguished Lecturer, IEEE Signal Processing Society, 1999[4]

Recent publications

  • Digital Speech Processing, B. H. Juang, M. M. Sondhi, and L. R. Rabiner, Encyclopedia of Physical Science and Technology, Third Edition, Volume 4, pp. 485–500, 2002.

References

  1. . gatech.edu http://juang.ece.gatech.edu. Retrieved June 11, 1017. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. "B. Juang". gatech.edu. Retrieved June 11, 2017.
  3. "Biing-Hwang Juang". gatech.edu. Retrieved June 11, 2017.
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