News & Events
2024
Professor Tian Daxin Elected IEEE Fellow 2025
Release time:December 9, 2024 / Lyu Xingyun

Professor Tian Daxin has been named an IEEE Fellow for 2025 in recognition of his outstanding contributions to vehicular communications and networking, announced by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) recently.

Tian Daxin, a candidate of the National Major Talent Program, is the vice dean of the Institute of Science and Technology and the director of the Frontier Innovation Department at Beihang University. He has won the Xplorer Prize and the Newton Advanced Fellowship, and has been recognized as an Outstanding Young Scholar in China's Frontiers of Engineering by the Chinese Academy of Engineering. He also serves as the director of the Unmanned Systems Committee of the Chinese Institute of Command and Control, and the director of the Beijing Key Laboratory for Cooperative Vehicle Infrastructure Systems and Safety Control.

Professor Tian is mainly engaged in research related to autonomous driving, the Internet of Vehicles, and vehicle-road collaboration. He has presided over 12 national-level projects, and has published more than 100 academic papers, seven monographs, two textbooks, and two translated works. He has been granted 51 invention patents and won 14 science and technology awards, including the second prize of the National Science and Technology Progress Award, as well as five teaching awards, including the first prize of the National Teaching Achievement Award.

IEEE is the world’s leading professional association dedicated to advancing technological innovation and excellence for humanity. The IEEE Grade of Fellow is one of the most prestigious honors of the IEEE, and is conferred upon a very limited number of Senior Members who have made significant contributions to the progress or application of engineering science and technology and brought great value to society. The number of IEEE Fellows selected in a year is no more than 0.1% of the total voting membership. In the past decade, approximately 300 people have been elected each year.


Editor: Lyu Xingyun

Source: Institute of Science and Technology

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