Age, Biography and Wiki
K. J. Ray Liu was born on 11 February, 1961 in Taiwan. Discover K. J. Ray Liu's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 62 years old?
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63 years old |
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Aquarius |
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11 February 1961 |
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11 February |
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Taiwan |
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Taiwan |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 11 February.
He is a member of famous with the age 63 years old group.
K. J. Ray Liu Height, Weight & Measurements
At 63 years old, K. J. Ray Liu height not available right now. We will update K. J. Ray Liu's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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K. J. Ray Liu Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is K. J. Ray Liu worth at the age of 63 years old? K. J. Ray Liu’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from Taiwan. We have estimated
K. J. Ray Liu's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Under Review |
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Pending |
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Timeline
Liu served as the 2022 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) president and CEO (2021 president-elect; 2023 past president) with the "Make IEEE Your Professional Home" motto for his IEEE presidency.
Liu was the 2022 IEEE President and CEO. He strived to "Make IEEE Your Professional Home", a motto that defines his IEEE Presidency. He has served as the 2019 IEEE Vice President - Technical Activities, Division IX Director of IEEE Board of Directors in 2016-17, and the President of IEEE Signal Processing Society in 2012-13. He was also the Editor-in-Chief of IEEE Signal Processing Magazine in 2003-05. Liu was a founder of Asia-Pacific Association of Signal and Information Processing (APSIPA).
He was a Distinguished University Professor, Distinguished Scholar-Teacher, and the Christine Kim Eminent Professor of Information Technology at the University of Maryland, College Park, from where he retired in 2021 after over three decades in academia. His research contributions encompass broad aspects of information and communications technology, with over 800 refereed papers, 70 patents, and 10 books.
Liu is the recipient of two IEEE Technical Field Awards: the 2021 IEEE Fourier Award for Signal Processing with the citation "For outstanding leadership in and pioneering contributions to signal processing for wireless sensing and communications", and the 2016 IEEE Leon K. Kirchmayer Graduate Teaching Award "for exemplary teaching and curriculum development, inspirational mentoring of graduate students, and broad educational impact in signal processing and communications".
Liu trailblazed the frontier of wireless sensing that makes sense of ambient Wi-Fi radio waves as the new sixth sense to decipher the world around us! The term "wireless" is no longer restricted to communications. Now and in the future, it is a sensing solution that will forever change Wi-Fi as we know it today, as well as future 5G/6G systems. Through his entrepreneurial endeavor, a new industry is emerging. In essence, one can now make sense of and monetize Channel State Information (sort of the Fourier transform of Channel Impulse Response), an unthinkable concept before. From now on, wireless sensing is becoming an integrated part of the technology infrastructure, especially for 5G/6G when bandwidth is large enough to harness more multipaths and most IoT devices are connected to deliver smart home/office/city. He was the first who proposed in 2019 the establishment of an international standard on wireless sensing to the Chair of the IEEE 802 Standard Committee, who facilitated the creation of 802.11bf WLAN Sensing as the world's first wireless sensing standard.
Time-reversal (TR) physics has been known for a long time but mostly found development in research labs and applications in defense-related military applications. Liu was the first to bring time-reversal to the practice and use of our daily life by leveraging radio-frequency multipaths in indoor or multipath-rich environments and prove that it can work effectively. Using the time-reversal principle, he developed the world’s first centimeter-accuracy indoor positioning and tracking system in 2015 with only a single transmitter and terminal device, both with a single antenna, in a completely non-line-of-site environment. It represented the first non-line-of-sight, non-triangulation technique for accurate position estimation, solving a long-standing conundrum of indoor positioning/tracking for over many decades.
He is also the recipient of numerous honors and awards including, IEEE Signal Processing Society 2014 Norbert Wiener Society Award for "influential technical contributions and profound leadership impact" (the highest award bestowed by SPS); IEEE Signal Processing Society 2009 Claude Shannon-Harry Nyquist Technical Achievement Award "for pioneering and outstanding contributions for the advances of signal processing in multimedia forensics, security, and wireless communications"; APSIPA 2018 Grand Award; 1994 National Science Foundation Young Investigator Award; IEEE Signal Processing Society Distinguished Lecturer; IEEE Signal Processing Society Meritorious Service Award; EURASIP Meritorious Service Award, and over a dozen of best paper/invention awards. He was inducted into the IEEE Technical Activities Board Hall of Honors in 2021 "for starting the financial transparency movement, initializing and realizing of IEEE DataPort and IEEE App".
Liu founded Origin Wireless in 2013. His inventions won three prestigious CES Innovation Awards, including CES Best of Innovation in 2021, 2017 CEATEC Grand Prix, 2021 Red Dot Design Award, and many other awards. Origin's first product, marketed as the Belkin Linksys Aware, was deployed in 2019 to over 150 countries worldwide as the first-ever Mesh Wi-Fi integrated communications and motion-sensing technology, marking the birth of integrated communications and sensing for mass consumer applications, and it won many prestigious awards. Verizon Fios launched Home Awareness and Signify, formerly known as Philips Lighting, did SpaceSense in 2022 enabled by Origin's wireless AI technology.
He also received various research and teaching recognitions from the University of Maryland, including Poole and Kent Senior Faculty Teaching Award (2005), Outstanding Faculty Research Award (2008), and Outstanding Service Award (2012), all from A. James Clark School of Engineering; Invention of the Year Award (three times) from the University's Office of Technology Commercialization, as well as the George Corcoran Award for outstanding contributions to electrical engineering education from the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, and the Outstanding Systems Engineering Faculty Award in recognition of outstanding contributions in interdisciplinary research from Institute for Systems Research.
He was also one of the earliest pioneers in multimedia forensics and security. In his 2005 book, "multimedia fingerprinting forensics for traitor tracing", the first of its kind, he has set the foundation and offered new directions for this emerging field. He coined the name “information forensics” when proposing and developing the journal IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security.
Recognized by Web of Science as a Highly Cited Researcher (2001-2014, 2016-17), Liu is a fellow of the IEEE, American Association for the Advancement of Science, and National Academy of Inventors. He was honored as 2021 Distinguished Alumni of National Taiwan University. His research was featured as one of seven technologies that IEEE believes will have the world changing implications on the way humans interact with machines, the world and each other, in honor of IEEE's 125th Anniversary.
He was also the founder and president of Odyssey Technology in 1997-1999, which developed the world's first digital surveillance system through the Internet.
As the founder and president of Odyssey Technology in 1997-1999, Liu and his team developed the world's first digital surveillance system through the Internet when the only available surveillance systems were analog. The system was immediately adopted worldwide and used by many major chain stores/banks.
As the pioneer of digital video surveillance in 1997, his vision brought the digital revolution into the surveillance industry, leading to where we are today. Its product, "Remoteeyes", was the world's first digital video surveillance system to monitor and secure home/office through the Internet remotely. The impact is everlasting with the ubiquitous use of cameras for surveillance over the Internet nowadays with a $50 billion market.
Liu also pioneered cross-layer design using antenna arrays for wireless communications in 1997 by first introducing the seminal concept of duality between uplink and downlink for joint transmit beamforming and power control to increase the number of users in a cellular network by 100x. It inspired decades of research and standard development in cross-layer optimization of MIMO wireless networks, dramatically impacting most wireless communications system designs.
Liu joined University of Maryland, College Park, in 1990, where he was a Distinguished University Professor and a Distinguished Scholar-Teacher and also Christine Kim Eminent Professor of Information Technology at Electrical and Computer Engineering Department of A. James Clark School of Engineering. He has trained over 70 Ph.D. and postdoctoral students, of which 10 are now IEEE fellows, including Wade Trappe, Zhen Jane Wang, Zhu Han and Haitao Zheng. He retired from the University of Maryland at the end of 2021.
Liu grew up in Taichung, Taiwan, where he attended St. Viator Catholic Junior High School and Taichung First Senior High School. He then went on to National Taiwan University, graduating in 1983 with a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering. After serving two years in mandatory military services, Liu earned a master's degree from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in 1987, before receiving Ph.D. degree at the University of California, Los Angeles in 1990.
K. J. Ray Liu (Chinese: 劉國瑞; pinyin: Liú Guó Ruì; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lâu Kok-sūi; born February 11, 1961, Taiwan) is an American scientist, engineer, educator, and entrepreneur. He is the founder, former Chief Executive Officer, and now Chairman and Chief Technology Officer of Origin Wireless, Inc., which pioneers artificial intelligence analytics for wireless sensing and indoor tracking.