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Bio: Antonio Napolitano was born in Napoli, Italy, on February 7, 1964.
He received the Dr. Eng. degree (summa cum laude) in electronic
engineering in 1990 and the Ph.D. degree in electronic and computer
engineering in 1994, both from the University of Napoli Federico II.
From 1994 to 1995, he was Appointed Professor of Electrical
Communications at the University of Salerno, Italy. From 1995 to
2001, he was an Assistant Professor with the Department of
Electronic and Telecommunication Engineering at the University of
Napoli Federico II, where since 1999, he has been Appointed
Professor of Radar Theory and Methods. In 1997, he was with the
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University
of California, Davis, as a Postdoctorate Research Associate.
From 2001 to 2005, he was Associate Professor of Signal Theory
with the University of Napoli Federico II. From 2005 he has been
Full Professor of Signal Theory, Information Theory,
and Digital Signal Processing with the Department for Technologies
at the University of Napoli \\\"Parthenope\\\". In 2005, he was
Visiting Professor at the Institute de Recherche Mathematique
de Rennes (IRMAR), University of Rennes 2, Haute Bretagne, France.
He held visting positions at the Centro de Investigacion en
Matematicas (CIMAT), Guanajuato, Gto, Mexico and at the Econometric
Department, Wyzsza Szkola Biznesu, WSB-NLU, Nowy Sacz, Poland.
His research interests include statistical signal processing, system
identification, the theory of higher order statistics of
nonstationary signals, and wireless systems.
He is IEEE and EURASIP Member, author/coauthor of numerous journal
and conference papers, and is reviewer for IEEE and EURASIP
international journals.
Dr. Napolitano received the Best Paper of the Year Award from the
European Association for Signal Processing (EURASIP) in 1995 for
his paper entitled \\\"Cyclic higher-order statistics:
Input/output relations for discrete- and continuous-
time MIMO linear almost-periodically time-variant systems\\\"
(Signal Processing, vol. 42, Mar. 1995). Since May 2006 he is
Associate Editor for the IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing.
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| Focus: Statistical signal processing |
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