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Martin Haenggi
Associate Professor

Ph.D.: Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), 1999.

Research Interests: - Information Theory for Mobile Ad Hoc Networks (IT-MANET): The goal of this project is to find the fundamental performance limits of mobile ad hoc networks in terms of throughput, delay, and reliability. It involves 12 investigators from 8 institutions and it support by DARPA/IPTO. - Networked Sensing in Built and Natural Environments: This is a multi- year multi-departmental project addressing distributed contaminant detection and propagation using a sparse stationary and mobile wireless sensor networks. It is supported by DTRA. - Geometric Analysis of Ad Hoc and Sensor Networks: This project derives analytical performance results for wireless networks modeled by general stochastic points processes. - Performance of Consensus Algorithms on Wireless Networks: The goal of this project is to analyze the convergence behavior of consensus algorithms under realistic communication constraints such as interference and fading. For more details, please visit Dr. Haenggi's personal page (refer to http://www.nd.edu/~mhaenggi).

Courses: Adv. Topics Random Wireless Network

Martin Haenggi received the Dipl. Ing. (M.Sc.) degree in electrical engineering from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich(ETHZ) in 1995. In 1995, he joined the Signal and Information Processing Laboratory at ETH as a teaching and research assistant. In 1998, he earned the Dipl. NDS ETH (post-diploma) degree in information technology, and in 1999, he completed his Ph.D. thesis on the analysis, design, and optimization of cellular neural networks. After a year as a postdoctoral research engineer at the Electronics Research Laboratory at the University of California in Berkeley, he joined the faculty of the electrical engineering department at the University of Notre Dame in January 2001. In 2007/08 spent a year on a sabbatical leave at the University of California at San Diego (UCSD). He is a member of the Executive Committee of the Center for Applied Mathematics at Notre Dame, a senior member of the IEEE and the ACM, and a member of the ASEE. He served on the Editorial Board of the Elsevier Journal of Ad Hoc Networks from 2005-2008 and currently serves as an Associate Editor for the IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing and the ACM Transactions on Sensor Networks.

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