Chung-Chin Lu
Appearance
Organization: | National Tsing Hua University |
Affiliation: | ICANN |
Stakeholder Group(s): | ,|xyz|xyz| }} |
Region: | Asia |
Country: | Taiwan |
Email: | cclu@ee.nthu.edu.tw |
Chung-Chin Lu is a professor from the Department of Electrical Engineering at National Tsing Hua University in Taiwan. His research interests include communication theory, system bioinformatics, quantum information science, and error-correcting codes.
Career History
- Dept of Electrical Engineering, National Tsing Hua University (2008 - Present)
- Computational Neurobiology Lab, Salk Institute, USA (2007 - 2008)
- Inst. for Neural Computation, University of California San Diego (2007 - 2008)
- EE Dept, Princeton University (1998 - 1999)
ICANN and Internet Governance Participation
- Co-chair, Workshop on Information Theory and Communications and 2006 Taiwan-Hong Kong Joint Workshop on Information Theory and Communications, 2006
- Program Co-chair, International Symposium on Communications, 1997 Program Co-chair, Workshop on Communication networks, 1996
Education
- B. Sc, Electrical Engineering, National Taiwan University
- M. Sc, Electrical Engineering, University of Southern California
- PhD in Electrical Engineering, University of Southern California
Publications
Chung-Chin Lu is the author and co-author of many publications:
- On bit-level trellis complexity of Reed-Muller codes
- A search of minimal key functions for normal basis multipliers
- A systolic array implementation of the Feng-Rao algorithm
- Loss behavior in space priority queue with batch Markovian arrival process-Discrete-time case
- Efficient architectures for syndrome generation and error location search in the decoding of Hermitian codes
- A serial-in-serial-out hardware architecture for systematic encoding of Hermitian codes via Groebner bases
- Prediction of splice sites with dependency graphs and their expanded Bayesian networks
- Space-time code design for CPFSK modulation over frequency-nonselective fading channels
- Systolic array implementation of a real-time symbol-optimum multiuser detection algorithm
- A view of Gaussian elimination applied to early stopped Berlekamp-Massey algorithm
- Extracting transcription factor binding sites from unaligned gene sequences with statistical models