Reminder Call for Nominations: IEEE Fellow Class of 2018: Deadline 1 March
Nominate an IEEE member for Fellow. It will be one of the high points in their career. The nomination period for the 2018 Fellow Class is…
Read moreGive the Gift of IEEE Membership
Want to help someone in your life find their professional home in IEEE? Start their 2017 by giving them the gift of IEEE membership; a gift that will…
Read moreAnnouncing the Latest Innovations for vTools.Events and eNotice
The IEEE MGA vTools team is excited to announce the integration of eNotice with vTools.Events. Now a meeting announcement can be created and sent…
Read moreMember News: Sensors and Sensibility by Vladimir Pavlovic
Member Vladimir Pavlovic tackles sensors in our latest blog post, “Sensors and Sensibility.” Read more.
Read moreCall for Nominations for Editors-in-Chief - Deadline Extended - 24 February
Thrasos Pappas SPS Vice President-Publications The IEEE Signal Processing Society (SPS) invites nominations for the position of Editor-in-Chief for…
Read moreSensors and Sensibility
Depending on who do you ask, we have five, six, or even twenty-one senses. Besides touch, vision, hearing, smell and taste, which we are taught about in kindergarten, we have senses of balance, hot and cold, pain, magnetic orientation (although very weak and close to nonexistent), position of our limbs relative to other parts of the body (can you touch your nose while eyes shut?), and more. If you hoped the sixth sense has anything to do with paranormal, I have to disappoint you.
A Visual Innovator and Entrepreneur, Steve Chen Sits at the Heart of Silicon Valley
Humans have been fascinated with light and optics since prehistoric times, when the first “camera” was used to project upside down images onto cave walls. IEEE recently presented the world’s first Visual Innovation Award to showcase innovations that made great impact on human experiences with visual technology or are anticipated to do so in the near future.
How Biometric Authentication Poses New Challenges to Our Security and Privacy
Nasir Memon, Computer Science and Engineering NYU Tandon School of Engineering
The use of biometric data – an individual’s measurable physical and behavioral characteristics – isn’t new. Government and law enforcement agencies have long used it. The FBI has been building a biometric recognition database; the Department of Homeland Security is sharing its iris and facial recognition of foreigners with the FBI.

