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IEEE Member Elevation

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Elevating your IEEE membership is more than just a title change; it is a prestigious recognition of your technical excellence and enduring impact within the global engineering community. The IEEE Signal Processing Society is dedicated to championing these elevations because celebrating the growth and mastery of our members reinforces our position as the world’s premier community for signal processing innovation.

IEEE Fellows Program Page Image

 

The IEEE Senior Member grade is the highest professional rank you can apply for, recognizing technical leadership and professional maturity. This elevation honors your achievements and marks you as a leader within the global Signal Processing community.

Why Elevate?

Achieving Senior Member status is a milestone that unlocks exclusive professional benefits:

  • Global Recognition: A peer-acknowledged mark of excellence and professional maturity.
  • Leadership Opportunities: Required for many executive volunteer roles within IEEE.
  • Exclusive Rewards: Receive a wood-and-bronze plaque, a letter of commendation to your employer, and a voucher to join one new IEEE Society for free.

Requirements & Support

To qualify, you need 10 years of professional experience (including your degree years) and 5 years of significant performance in the field. You also require three references from current IEEE Senior Members, Fellow, or Honorary Member grade.

How the IEEE Signal Processing Society Helps: If you need assistance finding references, the Society can bridge the gap. We can connect you with Signal Processing Society Chapter Chairs or mentors in your technical area who can review your work and serve as your professional references.

Take the Next Step

You can self-nominate at any time. For full application details and requirements, visit the official IEEE Senior Member webpage.

The IEEE Fellow grade recognizes individuals with an extraordinary record of accomplishment in any of the IEEE fields of interest.

Elevating to Fellow is a prestigious milestone that honors your technical achievements and the significant value you’ve brought to the global community.

Who Qualifies?

To be considered for the grade of Fellow, at the time of nomination, you must:

  • Hold  IEEE Senior Member or IEEE Life Senior Member grade 
  • Have 15 years or more of professional experience
  • Have completed a minimum of five cumulative years of IEEE membership in any grade preceding 1 January of the year of elevation.

Note: IEEE Society affiliate membership does not apply; the five years of membership is calculated on a cumulative basis, and they do not need to be consecutive.

Nominations

Each year, the IEEE Signal Processing Society receives many nominations, with about one-third of them reaching elevation. To improve your chances:

  • Review the IEEE Fellow Grade Nomination Categories
  • Focus on Two Main Contributions: Do not list more than two major technical achievements.
  • Show Concrete Evidence: Support your claims with papers, patents, standards, or widely adopted textbooks.
  • Demonstrate Lasting Impact: Explain how your work changed the profession or opened new research avenues.
  • Write for Non-Experts: While your nomination is reviewed by experts, your reference letters should be clear enough to impress the broader IEEE-level committee.

Important Deadlines

  • Early February: Deadline for all online nominations.
  • Late November: The new class of IEEE Fellows is officially announced.

Nominate a Colleague Today

SPS MEMBERS ELEVATED TO FELLOW

Each year, the IEEE Board of Directors confers the grade of Fellow on up to one-tenth of one percent of the voting members.  To qualify for consideration, an individual must have been a Member, normally for five years or more, and a Senior Member at the time for nomination to Fellow.  The grade of Fellow recognizes unusual distinction in IEEE’s designated fields.

The Signal Processing Society congratulates the following 56 SPS members who were recognized with the grade of Fellow as of 1 January 2025:

 

Balu Adsumilli, for contributions to video processing and pervasive user-generated online video content

Tareq Al-Naffouri, for contributions to adaptive signal processing and applications to wireless communications

Waheed Uz Zaman Bajwa, for contributions to compressed sensing, communications, and machine learning in distributed systems

Paolo Braca, for contributions to advancements in networked surveillance systems

Liangliang Cao, for contributions to computer vision and speech recognition with significant industrial impacts

Pin-Yu Chen, for contributions to machine learning robustness and AI safety

Kyungwhoon Cheun, for leadership in 5G mmWave and vRAN technologies

Davide Dardari, for contributions to theory and practice of radio positioning systems

Tiago Falk, for contributions to cognitive computing for adaptive, context-aware human-machine systems

Tim Fingscheidt, for contributions to speech enhancement systems and their evaluation

Carlo Fischione, for contributions to the theory and practice of wireless internet of things

Sinan Gezici, for contributions to wireless localization and ultra-wideband systems

Nuria Gonzalez Prelcic, for contributions to millimeter wave wireless communications

Ran He, for contributions to face analysis and image synthesis

Mingyi Hong, for contributions to optimization in signal processing, wireless communication and machine learning

Jiankun Hu, for contributions to biometrics security and anomaly intrusion detection

Yongming Huang, for contributions to signal processing for mmWave and MIMO wireless communications

Roozbeh Jafari, for contributions to sensors and systems for digital health paradigms

Krzysztof Kulpa, for contributions to passive radar

Bennett Landman, for contributions to MRI harmonization and data-driven modelling in medical image processing

Sanghoon Lee, for contributions to the modeling of human visual perception and processing of visual signals

Jinyu Li, for contributions to deep-learning-based speech technology innovation and commercialization

Jiaying Liu, for contributions to intelligent visual compression and enhancement

Karen Livescu, for contributions to multi-view and pre-trained speech representation learning

Sebastien Marcel, for contributions to biometric presentation attack detection

Santiago Marco, for contributions to the use of signal processing and machine learning in chemical sensing systems

Vishal Monga, for contributions to computationally efficient image analysis and restoration

Pedro Moreno, for contributions to speech recognition and industrial-scale internationalization of automated speech processing

Debdeep Mukhopadhyay, for contributions to design and analysis of hardware security primitives

Timothy O’Shea, for contributions to deep learning for physical layer communications and sensing

Ram Bilas Pachori, for contributions to application of signal decomposition methods to biomedical engineering

Wen-Hsiao Peng, for contributions to the design and implementation of video coding algorithms and standards

Dai Qionghai, for contributions to 3D content understanding and computational imaging

Philip Rubin, for contributions in speech synthesis and analysis, neuroscience, and ethics of research and technology

Luca Sanguinetti, for contributions to signal processing of multi-antenna and multi-cell wireless communications

Michael Lewis Seltzer, for contributions to speech recognition

Abdallah Shami, for contributions to methods for virtualized networks and optical access design

Zhiguo Shi, for contributions to array signal processing with applications to UAV surveillance

Byonghyo Shim, for contributions to sparse signal processing and multi-antenna technology

Teruhiko Suzuki, for contributions to video coding for professional and consumer products

Thomas Szabo, for contributions to ultrasound education and establishing technical standards

Dong Tian, for contributions to 3D video compression, processing, and analysis

Gordon Wetzstein, for contributions to computational imaging and display systems

Liang Xiao, for contributions to learning based wireless security

Hongkai Xiong, for contributions to multi-scale multimedia signal representation, coding and communication

Wei Xu, for contributions to hybrid MIMO transceiver design and distributed optimization for wireless networks

Jie Xu, for contributions to wireless information and power transfer and unmanned aerial vehicle enabled wireless networks

Jianhua Yao, for contributions to computer aided diagnosis, computational genomics and healthcare AI product development

Lei Ying, for contributions to fast magnetic resonance imaging with sparse sampling

Mika Ylianttila, for contributions to mobility management and network security

Alessio Zappone, for contributions to the energy-efficient design of wireless communication networks

Heiga Zen, for contributions to generative model-based speech synthesis

Guangtao Zhai, for contributions to perceptual quality assessment and enhancement of visual media

Xinmiao Zhang, for contributions to error-correcting codes and VLSI implementations

Wanlei Zhou, for contributions to cyber security and privacy

Jie Zhou, for contributions to visual content recognition and search

All SPS Fellows can be found here.