Prof (Kit) Kai-Kit Wong, University College London, United Kingdom
IEEE Fellow, IET Fellow
Editor-in-Chief for IEEE Wireless Communications Letters
Subject Editor-in-Chief for IET Electronics Letters for Wireless Communications
https://www.ee.ucl.ac.uk/~kwong/
Kai-Kit Wong (M'01-SM'08-F'16) received the BEng, the MPhil, and the PhD degrees, all in Electrical and Electronic Engineering, from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong, in 1996, 1998, and 2001, respectively. After graduation, he took up academic and research positions at the University of Hong Kong, Lucent Technologies, Bell-Labs, Holmdel, the Smart Antennas Research Group of Stanford University, and the University of Hull, UK. He is Chair in Wireless Communications at the Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, University College London, UK. His current research centers around 5G and beyond mobile communications. He is a co-recipient of the 2013 IEEE Signal Processing Letters Best Paper Award and the 2000 IEEE VTS Japan Chapter Award at the IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference in Japan in 2000, and a few other international best paper awards. He is Fellow of IEEE and IET and is also on the editorial board of several international journals. He is the Editor-in-Chief for IEEE Wireless Communications Letters since 2020.
Professor David Abramson, Fellow of ACM, IEEE, TSE, ACS
Director, Research Compt Cntr
Research Computing Centre, The University of Queensland, Australia
David has been involved in computer architecture and high performance computing research since 1979. He has held appointments at Griffith University, CSIRO, RMIT and Monash University.
Prior to joining UQ, he was the Director of the Monash e-Education Centre, Science Director of the Monash e-Research Centre, and a Professor of Computer Science in the Faculty of Information Technology at Monash. From 2007 to 2011 he was an Australian Research Council Professorial Fellow.
David has expertise in High Performance Computing, distributed and parallel computing, computer architecture and software engineering.
He has produced in excess of 200 research publications, and some of his work has also been integrated in commercial products. One of these, Nimrod, has been used widely in research and academia globally, and is also available as a commercial product, called EnFuzion, from Axceleon.
His world-leading work in parallel debugging is sold and marketed by Cray Inc, one of the world's leading supercomputing vendors, as a product called ccdb.
David is a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE), the Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering (ATSE), and the Australian Computer Society (ACS).
Dr. Eyup Cinar
Eskisehir Osmangazi University, Turkey
E. Cinar received his MSc. degree in 2010 from Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY in Electrical and Microelectronics Engineering as a Fulbright scholar and completed his Ph.D. studies at the same institution in 2015. After his doctoral studies, he has gained industrial experience and worked as Senior Engineer at GLOBALFOUNDRIES in Malta, NY as Advanced Process Control (APC), Fault Detection and Classification (FDC) engineer. In addition, he has worked as Senior Semiconductor Patterning Data Scientist at ASML-HMI in San Jose, CA. After being awarded an international fellowship for the Outstanding Researchers Program in Turkey, he has been working as a faculty member and Assistant Professor at Eskisehir Osmangazi University, Department of Computer Engineering in Turkey.,Dr. Eyup Cinar has multiple granted international patents, several journals, and conference publications, including awards given by international conference organizations.