Andrea Goldsmith
Andrea J. Goldsmith received her B.S.,
M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering
from U.C. Berkeley in 1986, 1991,
and 1994, respectively. She was an Assistant
Professor in the Department of Electrical
Engineering at Caltech from 1994 to
1999. In 1999, she joined the Electrical Engineering
Department at Stanford University,
where she is currently an Associate Professor.
Her industry experience includes af-
filiation with Maxim Technologies from 1986 to 1990, where she
worked on packet radio and satellite communication systems, and
with AT&T Bell Laboratories from 1991 to 1992, where she worked
on microcell modeling and channel estimation. Her research includes
works in capacity of wireless channels and networks, wireless
information and communication theory, multiantenna systems,
joint source and channel coding, cross-layer wireless network
design, communications for distributed control, and adaptive
resource allocation for cellular systems and ad-hoc wireless networks.
Dr. Goldsmith is a Terman Faculty Fellow at Stanford and a recipient
of the Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, the National Academy of
Engineering Gilbreth Lectureship, a National Science Foundation
Career Development Award, the Office of Naval Research Young
Investigator Award, a National Semiconductor Faculty Development
Award, an Okawa Foundation Award, and the David Griep
Memorial Prize from U.C. Berkeley. She was an Editor for the IEEE
Transactions on Communications from 1995 to 2002, and has been
an Editor for the IEEE Wireless Communications Magazine since
1995. She is also an elected member of Stanfords faculty senate and
the board of governors for the IEEE Information Theory Society.
Biography Updated on 11 August 2003
Scholarly Contributions [Data Provided by
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