Guoliang Xue
Professor, School of Computing and Augmented Intelligence
Guoliang (Larry) Xue is a professor of computer Science and engineering in the School of Computing and Augmented Intelligence at Arizona State University. He received his doctorate in computer science from the University of Minnesota in 1991 and has held previous positions at the Army High Performance Computing Research Center and the University of Vermont. His research interests include resource allocation, survivability and security of computer networks, with applications to Cloud Computing, Internet of Things (IoT), Crowdsourcing, and Sensor Networks. He has published more than 300 papers in these areas. His research has been continuously supported by federal agencies including NSF, ARO and DOE.
He was elevated to IEEE Fellow (Class of 2011), and served as the vice president of the IEEE Communications Society in charge of conferences from January 2016 to December 2017. He also served on the Fellow Evaluation Committee of the IEEE Communications Society in years 2016, 2017 and 2018.
Xue received many Best Paper Awards from various IEEE conferences. He was a Keynote Speaker in IFIP WWIC2018, IEEE ICNC2014, and IEEE LCN2011. He has been cited for more than 13,000 times (according to Google Scholar), including one paper with 1,700+ citations, three papers with 600+ citations each, six papers with 400+ citations each, and 28 papers with 100+ citations each.
Ready to mentor
Programs:
FURI
Resilience in Internet of Things and Future Generation Networks; Quantum Networks; Wireless Networks.