Associate
Professor (July 2006 - date)
Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering
The
· Graduate Program Director of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
· Research contract from Electric Power
Research Institute (EPRI) “Wireless
Mesh Sensor Network for Power Systems Monitoring”, $178,490, A. Nasipuri (PI),
I. L .Howitt, and J. Conrad. September 1, 2006 to December 31, 2008.
· Research contract from Electric Power
Research Institute (EPRI) “Wireless
Mesh Sensor Network for Fossil Plants Monitoring”, $56,779, A. Nasipuri (PI),
J. Conrad and R. Cox. February 25 to January 31, 2009.
· Research contract from Electric Power
Research Institute (EPRI) “Scalability
and Sustainability Issues of Wireless Mesh Sensor Network for Substation
Monitoring”, $120,354, A. Nasipuri (PI), J. Conrad and R. Cox. September 15 to
December 31, 2010.
Assistant
Professor (August 2000 - June 2006)
Department
of Electrical & Computer Engineering
The
· Maxheim Fellowship Award, 2004 – 2005, $5,000,
· Junior Faculty Grant, 2004 – 2005, $6,000, on the “Development of a
Wireless Sensor Network Prototype for Supervision and Control of Bioreactor
Landfills”.
· National
Science Foundation grant “CISE Research Resources: Experimental Testbed for
Mobile Network Protocols”,
$100,000, T. Dahlberg (PI), A. Nasipuri, E. El-Kwae, and
G. Ahn, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Sept. 2001 to February
2005.
· National
Science Foundation grant “Collaborative Proposal: Protocols for Mobile, Ad Hoc
Networks”, S. R. Das (PI) and A. Nasipuri,
University of Texas at San Antonio, $157,772, Oct. 1999 to Sept. 2003 (a
sub-award of $54,784 was made out to UNC Charlotte from this grant under the
title “Multi-channel CSMA Protocols”,
A. Nasipuri (PI) in August 2000).
· National
Science Foundation supplement to “Collaborative Proposal: Protocols for
· Nominated
for Graduate Teaching Excellent Award,
· Teaching:
Graduate courses on wireless communications, communication theory,
sensor networks, and data communications and undergraduate courses on signals
and systems, data communications and networking, and electronics.
Visiting
Researcher (May 1998 - August 2000)
Division of Computer Science
The
· Research on mobile ad hoc networks supported
by grant from Air Force Office of Scientific Research, “Telecommunication Networks for
· Graduate
student supervision: supervised
two MS theses on mobile ad hoc networks.
· Teaching: taught an undergraduate communication systems course.
Assistant Professor/Visiting Lecturer (Jan 1996 - May 1998/Nov 1993 - Dec 1995)
Department of
Electronics & Electrical Communication Engineering
Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur,
India.
· Research
grant from the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO),
Bangalore, India, on “Studies of the
Interplay of Source & Channel Coder Parameters for use in Digital Satellite
Communications", INR 500,000, March 1998 to Feb 2000, Asis Nasipuri
(PI), Saswat Chakrabarti
and Ranjan Gangopadhyay, at
I.I.T. Kharagpur, India.
· Research
grant from the European Community,
· Research
grant from NORTEL Technologies,
· Research
grant from All India Council of Technical Education (AICTE),
· Research
grant from Defense Research & Development Organization (DRDO),
· Funding
from the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD) and the All India
Council of Technical Education (AICTE), New Delhi, for conducting
short-term summer courses on wireless communications, personal communication
systems, and wavelength routed optical networks (1994 – 1997).
· Teaching:
graduate courses on mobile communications and information theory,
and undergraduate courses and laboratories on electronics, digital signal
processing, optical communications, analog and digital communications.
Teaching
Associate (January 1993 - May 1993)
Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering
· Teaching: Fundamentals
of Electrical Engineering, offered to non-ECE seniors in engineering.
Research
Assistant (June 1988 - December 1992)
Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering
University of Massachusetts,
Amherst.
· Research on the following topics and issues:
o
Signal detection using
distributed sensors
o
Multistage and sequential detector design
o
Nonparametric detection
o
Software development for symbolic
integration to obtain order statistics.