Award/Recognition Menu
The IEEE Circuits and Systems Society Mac Van Valkenburg Award honors the individual with outstanding technical and scientific contributions whose distinguishable leadership has made a significant impact globally, and who has led preeminent and extraordinary advancements in one or more fields within the scope of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society (CASS). The award is based on the quality of contribution, technical leadership and continued contributions to CAS Society evidenced by articles in CASS periodicals and CASS-sponsored conference proceedings, as well as service to the CASS community.
2,000 USD and Plaque. If more than one recipient, the monetary award will be divided equally.
Honoraria funded by accrued interest earned from initial funding endowment provided by NEC and Philips; managed by the IEEE Foundation. If there is insufficient interest in the account to fund the award, the Society will provide the funding. The plaque is funded by the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society. Award is funded via the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society Award Fund in the IEEE Foundation. The society/council's budget includes the amount for this award and the budget is net positive with the inclusion of the award.
Annually at the IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems (ISCAS). Presented in the name of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society (CASS).
Quality and significance of scientific and technical contribution and continuity of technical leadership and continued contributions to the CAS Society, as well as active participation in the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society (CASS) in terms of articles in CASS periodicals and CASS-sponsored conference proceedings, as well as, services to the CASS community.
Any member of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society in good standing for at least two years prior to the current award cycle year is eligible for the annual IEEE Circuits and Systems Society Mac Van Valkenburg Award. Eligibility and Selection process shall comply with procedures and regulation established in IEEE and Society/Council governing documents, particularly with IEEE Policy 4.4 on Awards Limitations. Previous award winners are not eligible for substantially the same achievements (per IEEE Policies 4.4: An individual shall receive only one award for a given achievement, unless the significance merits a higher award, which may be given in the following year or thereafter.)
A call for nominations for the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society Awards is issued to the CASS membership. The nominator must be a member of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society in good standing for at least two years prior to the current award cycle year, and is responsible for submitting the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society Mac Van Valkenburg Award Nomination by following the guidelines provided on the CASS website during the award nomination period. The nominator is responsible for adhering to the following guidelines:
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Five reference/endorsement letters.
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A completed nomination form submitted on the CASS website (with the five reference letters included).
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Previous winners of an achievement award of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society (including, the IEEE IEEE Circuits and Systems Society Mac Van Valkenburg Award, IEEE IEEE Circuits and Systems Society Charles A. Desoer Technical Achievement, and IEEE CASS Vitold Belevitch Circuits and Systems Award) are not eligible candidates for consideration of another achievement award for the same work.
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Self-nominations are not permitted.
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The chair or members of any Awards committee or subcommittee administering an award cannot serve as nominators or references and shall be ineligible as candidates for this award.
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In the case that a person is nominated for two or more Society awards, the appropriate award subcommittee(s) will confer with the CASS Awards committee chair and the nominator(s) to ensure that no one is awarded two or more Society awards in the same year.
The CASS Awards Committee Chair and the CASS Operations Office will receive all nominations. Both will keep the nominations confidential. Nominations will not be accepted after the deadline. Nominations should comply with IEEE Policies and restrictions on awards. Incidents of misconduct including, but not limited to, violations of IEEE's publication policies, will be strongly considered by the awards committee and may be grounds for denial of an award or leadership position.
2023
For contributions and leadership in biomedical circuits and systems
2022
for his pioneering and lifelong research contributions, particularly in multidimensional signal processing, distributed parameters networks, graph theory, discrete transforms, and image processing. For nearly six decades of outstanding contributions to education and for lifelong dedication to the service of the CAS Society
2021
for contributions in multimedia non-uniform coding and communications
2020
for fundamental contributions to circuits and systems using mathematical methods with applications in data & signal processing, security, and design
2019
for fundamental contributions to mixed-signal chip architectures for smart imaging, vision and 2-D data processing
2018
for technical leadership in high performance integrated circuit design
2017
for pioneering contributions to VLSI digital signal processing architectures, design methodologies, and their applications to wired and wireless communications, and service to IEEE Circuits and Systems Society.
2016
for sustained contributions to energy-efficient design methods for integrated circuits, networks and systems.
2015
for leadership in the design, analysis, optimization and design automation of analog and mixed signal circuits and systems.
2014
for his capability to harmonize research on advanced analog and mixed integrated circuit design with future industrial needs.
2013
for seminal contribution to the realizability of Nonlinear Circuits and Systems, Cellular Nonlinear Network (CNN) dynamics through a seminal theorem, and extension of the class of CNN, and fundamental contribution to the establishment of a spatial-temporal, stored programmable computing and computer paradigm based on the CNN universal machine.
2012
for sustained contributions to theory, practice and experimentation on design methods and tools for integrated circuits, systems and networks.