Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Babak Hassibi

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Nationality
  
Iranian American

Doctoral advisor
  
Role
  
Electrical engineer

Name
  
Babak Hassibi


Babak Hassibi Babak Hassibi Im Iranian


Institutions
  
California Institute of TechnologyBell LaboratoriesStanford University

Alma mater
  
Stanford UniversityUniversity of Tehran

Books
  
Linear Estimation, Indefinite-quadratic estimation and control

Fields
  
Information theory, Signal processing, Control theory

Residence
  
United States of America

Stochastic Descent Algorithms: Minimax Optimality, Implicit Regularization, and Deep Networks


Babak Hassibi (Persian: بابک حسیبی‎‎, born in Tehran, Iran) is an Iranian-American electrical engineer who is the inaugural Mose and Lillian S. Bohn Professor of Electrical Engineering at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). From 2011 to 2016 he was the Gordon M Binder/Amgen Professor of Electrical Engineering and during 2008-2015 he was Executive Officer of Electrical Engineering, as well as Associate Director of Information Science and Technology.

He received the B.S. degree in electrical engineering from the University of Tehran in 1989, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from Stanford University in 1993 and 1996, respectively. At Stanford his adviser was Thomas Kailath. He was a Research Associate in the Information Systems Laboratory at Stanford University during 1997-98 and was a Member of the Technical Staff in the Mathematics of Communications Research Group at Bell Laboratories in 1998-2000. Since 2001 he has been at Caltech.

His research is broadly in the areas of communications, signal processing and control. Among other works, he has shown the h-infinity-optimality of the least mean squares filter, used group-theoretic techniques to design space-time codes and frames and to study entropic vectors, performed information-theoretic studies of various wireless networks (such as determining the capacity of the MIMO wiretap channel), constructed tree codes for interactive communication and control, developed various algorithms and performance analyses for compressed sensing and structured signal recovery, studied epidemic spread in complex networks, and co-invented real-time DNA microarrays.

He is the recipient of the 2003 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE), the 2003 David and Lucille Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering, the Okawa Foundation Research Grant in Information Sciences in 2002 and the National Science Foundation Career Award in 2002.

His grandfather was the late Kazem Hassibi, Iranian academic, parliamentarian, National Front leader, and oil adviser to Mohammad Mosaddegh during Iran's oil nationalization.

References

Babak Hassibi Wikipedia