James McClellan
Dr. James H. McClellan received the B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering
from Louisiana State University in 1969 and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees
from
Rice University in 1972 and 1973, respectively. During 1973-4 he was a
member of the research staff at M.I.T.'s Lincoln Laboratory. He then
became
a professor in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department
at
M.I.T. In 1982, he joined Schlumberger Well Services where he worked on
the
application of 2-D spectral estimation to the processing of
dispersive sonic waves, and the implementation of signal processing
algorithms for dedicated high-speed array processors. He has been at
Georgia
Tech since 1987. Prof. McClellan is a Fellow of the IEEE and he received
the
ASSP Technical Achievement Award in 1987, and then the Signal Processing
Society Award in 1996. Prof. McClellan's current research interests are in
two areas of digital signal processing: algorithms for sensor array
processing, and computer software for digital signal processing design. He
is also interested in theoretical methods for spectrum analysis,
time-frequency representation of signals, multi-dimensional signal
processing, and spatial array processing. These extend to applications in
radar and geophysics.
Prof. McClellan is active in curriculum development for undergraduate
education. He is a co-author of the books Number Theory in Digital Signal
Processing, Computer-Based Exercises for Signal Processing, and DSP First:
A
Multimedia Approach.
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