Jean-Luc Gaudiot

Jean-Luc Gaudiot is a professor at the Henry Samueli School of Engineering at the University of California, Irvine.[1][2]

Education

In 1977, he earned his M.S. at the University of California, Los Angeles and his Ph.D there in 1982.[3]

Career

He served as the Editor-in-Chief on the IEEE Transactions on Computers from 1999 to 2000 until becoming the co-founder and founding Editor-in-Chief of IEEE Computer Architecture Letters from 2006 to 2009. From 2010 to 2015, he served as a member of the IEEE Computer Society Board of Governors. In 2013, he served as the Vice President of the IEEE Computer Society and Chair of Educational Activities Board. From 2014 and 2015, he served as the Vice President of the IEEE Computer Society and Chair of Publication Board and, in 2016, he served as the President-Elect of the IEEE Computer Society and, in 2017, he began serving as the President of the IEEE Computer Society.[4]

Research

His interests are in computer architecture, information, communication and design[5] and is one of the authors of Creating Autonomous Vehicle Systems, a technical overview of autonomous vehicles[2] written for a general computing and engineering audience. He is an elected IEEE fellow[2] and a distinguished alumni at ESIEE Paris.[6]

gollark: For example, if I said "this eBook is a book because it's a long-form piece of verbal content", I could then use the noncentral fallacy to go "so it's made of paper and has text printed onto physical pages".
gollark: X is sort of Y if you stretch the/a definition, so X should have all the connotations of Y.
gollark: Particularly the noncentral fallacy.
gollark: It's basically entirely appeal to emotion, vague word association and stacks upon stacks of fallacies.
gollark: It's also very hard to empirically test anything in politics, not that people want to anyway.

References


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