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(photo by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council)

Investing in next-generation wireless: meet Wei Yu

Researcher is one of three ˾ֱ leaders awarded NSERC's prestigious E.W.R. Steacie Memorial Fellowship

Your smartphone may keep getting smarter, but its network is struggling to keep up.

Demand for fast, cheap and plentiful data continues to surge, but wireless communications infrastructure is reaching the limits of what it can provide to users – unless we can find more efficient ways to engineer our networks.

is doing exactly that. A professor in The Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, Yu has been awarded a from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC).

Yu is one of three ˾ֱ researchers taking home an E.W.R Steacie this year; a total of six were awarded across Canada. (.) The other Fellows are Professor Aaron Wheeler of the department of chemistry, and Professor Leah Cowan of the department of molecular genetics.

The award allows researchers who show extraordinary promise to focus on their research, relieved of teaching and administrative duties for a two-year term. Each Fellow receives a research grant of $250,000. Up to six Fellows are named each year, and received their awards from the Governor General of Canada, David Johnston, at a ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on February 17.

“Being able to focus on research 100 per cent of the time is hugely important,” says Professor Yu. “The Steacie Fellowship makes it possible for me to recruit the best students and post-docs to my research program to help develop the next generation of wireless technologies.”

Professor Yu’s work tackles the design and optimization of wireless communication systems.

“I’m passionate about information theory, which is the mathematical foundation of modern digital communications,” he says.

Professor Yu is currently investigating novel ways that base-stations and smartphones in a radio-access network may cooperatively transmit and receive information to and from each other, in order to enhance signal quality and to reduce interference for wireless data access. His discoveries have impact on the network architecture, transceiver design and network deployment for future generation wireless cellular services.

Professor Yu’s work is already hugely influential – in 2014 he was named to Thomson Reuters’ rankings of the most . He is a Fellow of the IEEE, and holds a Canada Research Chair in Information Theory and Wireless Communications.

“Wei Yu is known internationally not only as an exceptional scholar in the communications field, but for the applicability of his work to engineering practice,” says Professor , chair of the Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering. “We are extremely proud and gratified to see him recognized with one of the most prestigious research awards in the country.”

Along with the ˾ֱ researchers who are taking home half of the E.W.R. Steacie awards conferred this year, another scholar was recognized by NSERC February 17: The Howard Alper Postdoctoral Prize was awarded to of the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics and the Centre for Planetary Science at ˾ֱ Scarborough for his development of tools to study the climate of remote planets.

“My congratulations to all our NSERC award winners,” said Professor Vivek Goel, ˾ֱ’s vice-president of research and innovation. “They are conducting both fundamental research that is pushing the boundaries of human knowledge and applied research that will improve health and quality of life worldwide in the coming years. We are grateful to NSERC for this recognition of and investment in ˾ֱ researchers.”

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