Raymond Knopp

Also published under:R. Knopp

Affiliation

Eurecom Sophia, Antipolis, France

Topic

User Equipment,Additive Noise,Channel Estimation,Reference Signal,Short Block,Block Error Rate,Distributed Unit,Likelihood Function,Power Adjustment,Short Channel,Ultra-reliable Low-latency Communications,Base Station,Bit Length,Block Length,Channel State,Code Blocks,Code Length,Codeword,Complex Dimensions,Computational Complexity,Control Plane,Core Network,Data Symbols,Decoding Algorithm,Generator Matrix,Joint Detection,Joint Estimation,Likelihood Ratio Test,Line-of-sight Channel,Low Complexity,Modulation Symbols,Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing,Perfect Channel State Information,Perfect Information,Performance Gap,Physical Layer,Polar Codes,Protocol Stack,Quadrature Phase Shift Keying,Radio Access Network,Resource Elements,Virtual Network Functions,5G New Radio,5G Systems,5G Technology,6G Networks,Ad Hoc Networks,Adaptive Adjustment,Adaptive Power,Antenna Array,

Biography

Raymond Knopp ([email protected]) received his B. Eng. (Honours) and M. Eng. degrees in electrical engineering from McGill University, Montreal, Canada, in 1992 and 1993, respectively. In 1997, he received his Ph.D. degree in communication systems from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne (EPFL). During his Ph.D. studies (1993–1997), he was a research and teaching assistant in the Mobile Communications Department of EURECOM, Sophia-Antipolis, France. From 1997 to 2000 he was a research associate in the Mobile Communications Laboratory of EPFL. In 2000 he rejoined the Mobile Communications Department of EURECOM as a professor. His current research and teaching interests are in the areas of digital communications, software radio architectures, and implementation aspects of signal processing systems. He has published numerous journal and conference articles, and he is actively involved in many collaborative research projects in wireless communication systems with industry.