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The IEEE Grade of Fellow is conferred by the Board of Directors upon a person with an extraordinary record of accomplishments in any of the IEEE fields of interest. A brief citation is issued to new Fellows describing their accomplishments and the total number selected in any one year does not exceed one-tenth percent of the total voting Institute membership.

The Notre Dame Department of Electrical Engineering is proud to have a good number of IEEE fellows among our faculty. Scroll down below to browse these distinguished engineers and read their citations. You can click on a name to view their faculty web page.

Panos Antsaklis, Brosley Chair Professor

“For contributions to the theory of feedback stabilization and control of linear multivariable systems.”
Peter Bauer, Professor

“For contributions to stability theory of time-variant and nonlinear discrete time systems.”
Gary Bernstein, Professor

“For contributions to techniques for fabricating nanoscale devices and circuits”
Oliver Collins, Professor

“For contributions to the theory and practice of error-correcting codes.”
Daniel Costello, Bettex Chair Professor

“For contributions to coding for reliable communication and to engineering education.”
Thomas Fuja, Professor & Chair

“For contributions to error control coding.”
Yih-Fang Huang, Professor

“For fundamental contributions to set-membership identification for signal processing and control systems.”
Ruy-Wen Liu, Faculty Emeritus

“For contributions to the analysis of nonlinear circuits and systems.”
James Merz, Frank M. Freimann Professor

“For contributions to the fundamental understanding of the optical properties of compound materials, and for leadership in the organization of optoelectronics research.”
Anthony Michel, Faculty Emeritus

“For contributions to qualitative analysis of large-scale dynamical systems.”
Wolfgang Porod, Freimann Chair Professor

“For contributions to circuit concepts and architectures for nanoelectronics.”
Michael Sain, Frank M. Freimann Professor

“For contributions to the theory of multivariable control systems.”
Alan Seabaugh, Professor

“For contributions to high speed and nanoelectronic device and circuit technology.”