information theory society awards committee report

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Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report Chair: Andrea Goldsmith IT Society BOG Meeting July 6, 2008 ISIT Toronto, CA

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Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report. Chair: Andrea Goldsmith. IT Society BOG Meeting July 6, 2008 ISIT Toronto, CA. Committee Members. Frank Kschischang (2 nd VP, Ex-Officio) Ning Cai Robert Calderbank Anne Canteaut Suhas Diggavi Tuvi Etzion Michael Honig - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Chair: Andrea Goldsmith

IT Society BOG MeetingJuly 6, 2008

ISITToronto, CA

Page 2: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Committee Members Frank Kschischang (2nd VP, Ex-Officio) Ning Cai Robert Calderbank Anne Canteaut Suhas Diggavi Tuvi Etzion Michael Honig Ioannis Kontoyiannis Upamanyu Madhow Andreas Winter

Page 3: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Paper Awards The awards committee handles 3 paper awards: The IT paper award

Papers published in IT Transactions in 2006 or 2007 The joint IT/Comsoc paper award

Papers published in any IT or Comsoc journal in 2007 The ISIT 2008 student paper award

Papers accepted to ISIT’08 with a student as main contributor are eligible Committee also actively solicited nominations for the IEEE Fink

(tutorial) prize paper award

Page 4: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Current Status The winner of the joint IT/Comsoc paper

has been decided. We have made a recommendation for

the IT paper award Motion to be presented

The committee has selected the ISIT student paper award finalists Final winners decided at ISIT and

announced at the Thursday banquet

Page 5: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Joint IT/Comsoc Paper AwardNominations

In prior years there was a dearth of nominations

One last year Committee made a significant effort to solicit

more nominations Call for nominations published in newsletter, website,

and twice on the BoG mailing list Nominations requested from IT AEs Nominations requested from committee Received 6 nominations

Page 6: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Joint IT/Comsoc Paper AwardProcess

This paper award was handled first to meet Comsoc’s deadline to annouce at ICC

IT awards committee selects 1-2 finalist papers from nominated papers

Comsoc awards committee selects 1-2 finalist papers from nominated papers

A subcommittee with 2 members each from IT and Comsoc selects the final winner(s) – up to 2.

Winner was decided in May and was announced on IT/Comsoc websites and at ICC

Will also be announced at ISIT awards lunch

Page 7: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Joint IT/Comsoc Paper AwardFinalist Papers

Email discussion and 2 votes conducted One paper finalist nominated by our committee

“Hierarchical Cooperation Achieves Optimal Capacity Scaling in Ad Hoc Networks” by Ayfer Özgür, Olivier Lévêque, and David Tse,IEEE Trans. Information Theory, Vol. 53, No. 10, Oct. 2007.

One paper finalists nominated by Comsoc“Accumulate-Repeat-Accumulate Codes” by Aliazam Abbasfar, Dariush Divsalar and Kung Yao, IEEE Trans. on Commun., Vol. 55, No. 4, April 2007.

Page 8: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Joint IT/Comsoc Paper AwardFinal Decision

Subcommittee appointed by Comsoc and IT Awards Committee Chairs: IT: Mike Honig andFrank Kschischang Comsoc: Reinaldo Valenzuela and Ray Pickoltz

(chair). A conference call and extensive email

discussions led to final decision. The paper selected for the award was

“Accumulate-Repeat-Accumulate Codes” by Abbasfar, Divsalar, and Yao.

Page 9: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Joint IT/Comsoc Paper AwardIssues

Cross-nominations between IT/joint award Can a paper be nominated for both awards? Should it be precluded that the same paper win both

the joint award and IT award?

Decision in time for ICC announcement One year window for the award Subcommittee of four may be too small

Page 10: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Straw-Man Proposal Cross-nominations between IT and joint

IT/Comsoc allowed Once a paper has won one award, it should

be ineligible for the other. Timing of awards should be decoupled

Joint award decided first. Subcommittee size should be seven

Chair alternates between societies One-year window (with a shift?) is OK.

Page 11: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Joint IT/Comsoc Paper AwardBylaws

Joint award currently not in the bylaws

Committee will make a recommendation for a bylaw amendment at Allerton Based on sentiment to straw-man

proposal

Page 12: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

ISIT Student Paper AwardsProcess

Recommendations from TPC chairs solicited: only 2 received (how to improve?)

ISIT TPC sent awards committee a list of all eligible papers with reviews and papers (2000 pages) and a spreadsheet

The committee struggled to find best candidates with this format of information

Better interface between TPC and awards committee needed (will recommend at ISIT)

Page 13: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

ISIT Student Paper Awards Finalists

New bounds on the information-theoretic key agreement of multiple terminals by A.A. Gohari and V. Anantharam

Linear programming bounds for unitary space time codes by J. Creignou and H. Diet

Exchange of Limits: Why Iterative Decoding Works by S. B. Korada and R. Urbanke

A New Channel Coding Achievability Bound by Y. Polyanskiy, H.V. Poor, and S. Verdu

Communication Requirements for Generating Correlated Random Variables by P. Cuff

Page 14: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

ISIT Student Paper Awards Selecting the winners

The awards committee will review the finalist presentations at ISIT

Paper award winner(s) will be decided based on paper and presentation quality

Will announce the winner(s) at ISIT banquet

Page 15: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

ISIT Student Paper AwardsIssues

COI: TPC concerned about (appearance of) COI Resolved by putting all responsibility with the awards

committee (all TPC papers eligible) Eligibility:

Should papers based on thesis work be eligible May dilute the purpose of the award and could create

confusion/room for interpretation Current criterion that an author be a registered

student at the time of paper submission is best

Page 16: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

ISIT Student Paper AwardsIssues

TPC Involvement: Would have been helpful for the committee to get more

finalists recommendations from the TPC: Only received 2, 5-10 would have been better Should be more emphasis on generating nominations

during the review process. TPC should be more involved and/or handle the award

Information Exchange: Format of information committee received was very

difficult to work with (initially a 2000 page document). Need to standardize the format for information exchange

Page 17: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Straw Man Proposal(s) The award is handled by a subcommittee

of the ISIT TPC Large enough so that dropouts due to conflicts

of interest leave it functional.

 The award is handled by a subcommittee of awards committee and TPC members To ensure continuity of process and benefit of

experience from year to year

Page 18: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

IT Paper AwardNominations

Call for nominations published in newsletter, website, and BoG mailing list

Nominations requested from IT AEs The committee received a total of 15

nominations for 10 papers from the publications committee.

One additional paper nominated internally for a total of 11 papers to consider

Much deliberation and several votes to narrow it down to four finalists

Page 19: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

IT Paper AwardFinalist Papers

"Compressed Sensing", by David Donoho, IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory, Vol. 52, No. 4, pp 1289-1306, April 2006.

"Near-optimal signal recovery from random projections: universal encoding strategies?”, by Emmanuel Candes and Terence Tao, IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory, Vol. 52, No. 12, pp 5406-5425, December 2006.

“A random linear network coding approach to multicast,” by T. Ho, M. Medard, R. Koetter, D. R. Karger, M. Effros, J. Shi, and B. Leong, IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory, Vol. 52,  No. 10,  pp. 4413 – 4430, Oct. 2006

“Networks, matroids, and non-Shannon information inequalities,” by R. Dougherty, C. Freiling, and K. Zeger, IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory, Vol. 53, No. 6, pp. 1949-1969, June 2007

Page 20: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

IT Paper AwardCommittee Recommendation

The committee unanimously recommends that the 2008 IT paper award be given to

"Compressed Sensing" by David Donoho

and

"Near-optimal signal recovery from random projections: universal encoding strategies?”

by Emmanuel Candes and Terence Tao

Page 21: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Basis of Recommendation These ground-breaking papers independently introduce the area

of compressed sensing, which establishes that if an unknown signal is compressible in some basis and a specific nonlinear reconstruction algorithm is used, the number of samples (measurements) needed for signal recovery can be dramatically smaller than the dimensionality of the original signal. This new branch of detection and estimation holds great promise for processing massive amounts of data, and has already had a broad impact on a diverse set of fields, including signal processing, information theory, function approximation, MRI, radar design, and sigma-delta conversion.

It is rare that a paper establishes a new field, is technically deep, and touches so many different fields. The Donoho and Candes-Tao papers are in this category

Page 22: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Acknowledgement Acknowledge the role of the paper “Robust

uncertainty principles: Exact signal reconstruction from highly incomplete frequency information” by Emmanuel Candès, Justin Romberg, and Terence Tao, published in the IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory, Vol. 52, No. 2, pp. 489 - 509, Feb. 2006 in developing some of the preliminary ideas that sparked the field of compressed sensing.

Page 23: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

We are not following the Bylaws for IT Paper Award

By March 15, the chair of the Publications Committee or designee shall forward to the First Vice President a list of at least nine articles, published in the previous calendar year, for the consideration of the Awards Committee. Each nomination shall be accompanied by a statement outlining the contribution of the paper.

The Awards Committee shall take into account (a) all nominations submitted in response to the open call for nominations in the last two years; (b) the nominations supplied by the Publications Committee in the last two years; (c) any nomination that its members may want to submit for consideration.

Page 24: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Current procedure Nominations from open call sent to EIC EIC adds AE nominations EIC sends combined list to awards

committee chair (total of 9 this year) Should we follow bylaws or change them?

Do we need a separate list from Pubs committee which is held for two years?

Should there be a minimum number of nominations from the Pubs committee?

Page 25: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Baker Prize The IEEE Awards Board decided recently to

recommend discontinuing the Baker prize Prize for the most outstanding paper in any IEEE publication

in a given year Officers discussed trying to reinstate it. Proposal presented to the IEEE Awards Board in Feb. Awards Board passed a motion reiterating its

recommendation to terminate to Board of Directors At recent IEEE TAB meeting there was strong

support among 7 societies for reinstituting the award.

Page 26: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Motion The IEEE Information Theory Society, in partnership with

other societies, strongly supports the continuation of the historic W. R. G. Baker Prize Paper Award. We are prepared to support modifications in its terms to adapt the award to current conditions and to make it easier to administer, such as restricting the award to fundamental theory papers and broadening the time window to five years so as better to assess impact. The IT Society will commit to providing one member to the selection committee every year, and will provide a proportionate amount of the cost of administering the award (now estimated at $5000 per year, or the equivalent in endowment).

Page 27: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Other Awards Committee responsible for 3 nominations to

IEEE Fink paper award Committee also nominated Jacob Ziv for BBVA

award.

Page 28: Information Theory Society Awards Committee Report

Committee Load Handling 3 paper awards, soliciting Fink award

nominations and BBVA nominations a lot of work

DL recommendations may also be handled by this committee

Perhaps the committee should be split To be discussed at Allerton