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Dr. Lang Hong is a Professor of Electrical Engineering in the EE
Department of Wright State University. He received his M.S. degree and
Ph.D. degree both in electrical engineering from the University of
Tennessee, Knoxville in 1986 and 1989, respectively. Dr. Hong joined the
faculty of the Dept. of Electrical Engineering, Wright State University
in 1989. His research interests include multisensor fusion, multitarget
tracking and data association, automatic target recognition, stochastic
systems, system estimation and identification, computer vision, image
processing and pattern recognition, robotics-sensing and control. Dr.
Hong's recent research is specifically focused on multiresolutional
deterministic and stochastic signal estimation and processing, with
applications to target tracking, sensor fusion and target recognition.
He is among the very first few people in applying wavelets-related
techniques to stochastic signal estimation and processing, and is the
pioneer in applying multiresolutional approaches to target tracking and
sensor fusion. He has developed a theoretic framework of
multiresolutional (both in time and spatial domains) target tracking,
sensor fusion and sensor management to achieve computation/communication
efficiency, performance robustness and resource optimization. Dr. Hong
has published extensively in these areas, including three U.S. patents,
and about 60 journal papers and 80 conference papers. Dr. Hong has
obtained more than $2,200,000 in external funding from federal agencies,
the state of Ohio and various industries. Dr. Hong received the
1995-1996 Outstanding Faculty Award and 1996-1997 Excellence in Research
Award from the College of Engineering and Computer Science, Wright State
University. Dr. Lang Hong is a senior member of IEEE, a member of SPIE,
and a member of the Phi Kappa Phi honor society.
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