Contributed to numerous research projects and presented papers at various international conferences such as the European Conference on Computer Vision, IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, etc. Specific research achievements include synthetically supervised feature learning for scene text recognition, re-weighted adversarial adaptation network for unsupervised domain adaptation, multi-task adversarial adaptation network for disentangled feature learning, among others.
Research Experience
Since joining the University of Cambridge in May 1999, he has published over 200 publications and successfully supervised 23 PhD students and 6 MPhil students. He is currently leading the research on wireless communications within the Digital Technology Group at the Computer Laboratory.
Education
Received BSc and BEng degrees from Loughborough University in 1983; obtained a PhD from the University of Southampton in 1990, focusing on Viterbi Equalisation for wireless and mobile systems.
Background
Senior Lecturer at the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory. Research interests include broadband fixed wireless access, sensor networks, cooperative and relay networks, propagation measurement and empirical modeling, EM-based propagation modeling, Turbo and convolutional coding, bit interleaved coded modulation and iterative detection, MIMO systems, signal processing for MIMO detection, compressive sensing, sparse representation of data, sparse image and video coding, and classification.
Miscellany
Fellow of Churchill College and has supervised second-year linear systems and communication topics to Churchill engineering students for several years. Member of the Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET) and has served on the local Cambridge committee of the IET.