Sergio Verdú
Professor of Electrical Engineering
Ph.D. 1984, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
My current research is in the field of information theory, exploring the fundamental
limits of data transmision and compression systems. Opportunities for research exist
in a wide range of problems as illustrated by some of our previous contributions
to information theory:
a) Connections between information theory and estimation theory
b) Discrete denoising
c) Universal compression and estimation of information measures
d) Erasure channels
e) Multiantenna capacity
f) Communication in the wideband regime
g) Random Matrices and information theory
h) Capacity of CDMA and other multiple-access channels
i) Multiuser detection
j) Timing channels and the capacity of the single-server queues
k) Feedback in communication
l) Data compression with error correcting codes
m) Generation of random bits from stochastic processes
n) Rate-distortion function of Poisson processes and other continuous-time Markov
processes.
o) The maximum randomness required to simulate the input to a random system.
p) General formulas for mimum compression rate, channel capacity, and rate-distortion
functions and the information spectrum method.
q) Joint source-channel coding and the validity of the separation principle.
r) The empirical distribution of capacity-achieving codes.
s) Information theoretic bounds for the finite blocklength regime
The collection of tutorial articles Information
Theory: Fifty Years of Discovery, published
by IEEE Press in 1999, and the journal Foundations
and Trends in Communications and Information Theory are useful references for graduate students searching for
research topics.
For more detailed information on my research interests and publications, please
visit the web site http://www.princeton.edu/~verdu.
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