Bertram Emil SHI 施毅明
Bertram Emil SHI 施毅明 Details
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Biography
Prof. Bertram Shi was appointed as Special Advisor to Vice-President for Research and Development (VPRD) with effect from January 1, 2023.
Currently a Professor in the Department of Electronic and Computer Engineering (ECE), Prof. Shi received his PhD in Electrical Engineering from the University of California, Berkeley in 1994 and joined HKUST as Assistant Professor in the same year. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 2001 and then to full Professor in 2008.
Having joined the University in its early years, Prof. Shi has strong administrative experience serving the ECE Department and the School of Engineering. He was Acting Dean of Engineering (2022), Head (2015-2021) and Associate Head (2010-2014) of ECE, and Founding Director of the MSc Program in Electronic Engineering (2004). He has served on various executive committees, notably chairing the Curriculum Committee (2008-2010) during the ramp-up to the launch of the 3+3+4 curriculum. His administrative capability has been demonstrated by his outstanding leadership in successfully driving several endeavors at the Department, School and University levels.
Prof. Shi is an established scholar in the areas of neuromorphic engineering, computational neuroscience, and human-machine & human-robot interfaces, with a particular focus on the modeling and automated analysis of facial expressions and eye movements. His research group has developed top-ranked systems for emotion recognition and received top paper prizes at international conferences. He was elected a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in 2001, becoming one of the youngest elected fellows as a testament to his international stature. He has a keen interest in how technology can open doors to a better understanding of human behavior and how to use that understanding to build technology that better supports humanity, which has led to joint research projects with faculty from all four schools of the university.
He has been active in providing professional services to the IEEE and to the academic community at large. He was a Distinguished Lecturer of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society (CASS), chaired the IEEE CASS Technical Committee on Cellular Neural Networks and Array Computing, and served on the editorial boards of multiple professional journals.
Research Interests
Biography
Prof. Bertram Shi was appointed as Special Advisor to Vice-President for Research and Development (VPRD) with effect from January 1, 2023.
Currently a Professor in the Department of Electronic and Computer Engineering (ECE), Prof. Shi received his PhD in Electrical Engineering from the University of California, Berkeley in 1994 and joined HKUST as Assistant Professor in the same year. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 2001 and then to full Professor in 2008.
Having joined the University in its early years, Prof. Shi has strong administrative experience serving the ECE Department and the School of Engineering. He was Acting Dean of Engineering (2022), Head (2015-2021) and Associate Head (2010-2014) of ECE, and Founding Director of the MSc Program in Electronic Engineering (2004). He has served on various executive committees, notably chairing the Curriculum Committee (2008-2010) during the ramp-up to the launch of the 3+3+4 curriculum. His administrative capability has been demonstrated by his outstanding leadership in successfully driving several endeavors at the Department, School and University levels.
Prof. Shi is an established scholar in the areas of neuromorphic engineering, computational neuroscience, and human-machine & human-robot interfaces, with a particular focus on the modeling and automated analysis of facial expressions and eye movements. His research group has developed top-ranked systems for emotion recognition and received top paper prizes at international conferences. He was elected a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in 2001, becoming one of the youngest elected fellows as a testament to his international stature. He has a keen interest in how technology can open doors to a better understanding of human behavior and how to use that understanding to build technology that better supports humanity, which has led to joint research projects with faculty from all four schools of the university.
He has been active in providing professional services to the IEEE and to the academic community at large. He was a Distinguished Lecturer of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society (CASS), chaired the IEEE CASS Technical Committee on Cellular Neural Networks and Array Computing, and served on the editorial boards of multiple professional journals.