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Robert G. Gallager was born in Philadelphia, Penn., on May 29, 1931. He
received the B.S.E.E. degree from the University of Pennsylvania in
1953, and the S.M. and Sc.D. degrees in electrical engineering from
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1957 and 1960,
respectively. He was a member of the technical staff at the Bell
Telephone Laboratories in 1953-1954 and then served in the
U.S. Signal Corps from 1954 to 1956. He has been a faculty member at
MIT since 1960 where he was Co-Director of the Laboratory for
Information and Decision Systems from 1986 to 1998, was named Fujitsu
Professor in 1988, and became Professor Emeritus in 2001. He was a
Visiting Associate Professor at the Univ. of Calif., Berkeley, in 1965
and a Visiting Professor at the E.N.S.T, Paris, in 1978. His 1960
Sc.D. thesis, Low Density Parity Check Codes, was published by the
M.I.T. Press as a monograph in 1963. An abbreviated version appeared
earlier (January 1962) in the IRE Transactions on Information Theory
and was republished in the 1974 IEEE Press volume, Key Papers in The
Development of Information Theory, edited by Elwyn Berlekamp. This
paper won an IEEE Information Theory Society Golden-Jubilee Paper
Award in 1998 and its subject matter is a very active area of research
today. Gallager's January 1965 paper in the IEEE Transactions on
Information Theory, "A Simple Derivation of the Coding Theorem and
some Applications, won the 1966 IEEE W.R.G. Baker Prize "for the most
outstanding paper, reporting original work, in the Transactions,
Journals and Magazines of the IEEE Societies, or in the Proceedings of
the IEEE" and also won another IEEE IT Society Golden-Jubilee Paper
Award in 1998. His book, Information Theory and Reliable
Communication, Wiley 1968, placed Information Theory on a sound
mathematical foundation and is still considered by many as the
standard textbook on information theory.
In the mid 1970's, Gallager's research focus shifted to data networks,
focusing on distributed algorithms, routing, congestion control, and
random access techniques. Data Networks, Prentice Hall, 1988, second
edition 1992, co-authored with D. Bertsekas, helped provide a
conceptual foundation for this field. His June 1993 joint paper with
A. K. Parekh, "A Generalized Processor Sharing Approach to Flow
Control in ISN won the IEEE Communication Society's William Bennett
Prize Paper Award "for the best original paper published in the
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking in the past year" and a
preliminary version won the Prize Paper Award for Infocomm 1993.
In the 1990's, Gallager's interests shifted back to information theory
and to stochastic processes. He wrote the 1996 textbook, Discrete
Stochastic Processes, Kluwer. Gallager's current interests are in
information theory, wireless communication, all optical networks, data
networks, and stochastic processes.
Gallager has always been particularly proud of the many graduate
students whose research he has supervised, many of whom are now
themselves leading researchers in their fields. He has also been an
extremely conscientious and effective teacher and received the
MIT Graduate Student Council Teaching A ward for 1993. He is
currently working on a textbook in Digital Communications.
Gallager was instrumental in the founding of Codex Corporation in 1962
(now part of Motorola) and consulted there for many years. He served
Codex as Acting Vice President for Research in 1971-1972. His
fundamental studies on quadrature amplitude modulation and detection
led directly to the 9600 bits/sec modems that provided Codex's
commercial success. He has also consulted for the MIT Lincoln
Laboratory a number of other companies. He has been granted five
patents on his inventions.
Gallager was President of the IEEE Information Theory Society in 1971,
a member of its Board of Governors from 1965 to 1972 and again from
1979 to 1988. He served the IEEE Transactions on Information Theory as
Associate Editor for Coding 1963-1964 and as Associate Editor for
Computer Communications from 1977 to 1980. He was Chairman of the
Advisory committee to the NSF Division on Networking and Communication
Research and Infrastructure from 1989 to 1992, and has been on
numerous visiting committees for Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science departments. Gallager's major honors, in addition to the
prize paper awards mentioned above, include:
- IEEE Fellow (1968)
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Univ. of Penn. Moore School Gold Medal Award (1973)
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Guggenheim Fellow (1978)
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US National Academy of Engineering (1979)
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IEEE Information Theory Society Shannon Award "for consistent and profound contributions to information theory" (1983)
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IEEE Medal of Honor "for fundamental contributions to communications coding techniques" (1990)
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US National Academy of Sciences (1992)
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Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1999)
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Harvey Prize in Science and Technology of the Technion - Israel
Institute of Technology "in recognition of his pioneering work
and fundamental contributions to Information and Coding Theories
and for his profound insight into the Theory of Computer
Networking, which have inspired the work of many generations of
communication engineers and scientists" (1999)
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Eduard Rhein Prize for Basic Research, Germany, "for his basic
work and fundamental contributions to information theory, coding
theory, to mobile communications and to the theory of
communication networks" (2002).
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Marconi Fellow (2003)
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