For Release: October 28, 2010
AES Announces 129th Convention Student Technical Paper Awards
SAN FRANCISCO: Two outstanding presentations will be recognized with Student Technical Paper Awards at the 129th AES Convention at SF’s Moscone Center Nov. 4-7. Convention Papers Co-Chairs Veronique Larcher, and Rob Maher, who also serves as Student Technical Paper Award Coordinator, have announced that the co-recipients are: Tejaswi Nanjundaswamy, University of California, Santa Barbara, and Tobias Ritter, Technical University of Denmark. The award certificates will be presented to the winners during the Opening Ceremonies on Thursday, Nov. 4, 1:00PM to 2:30PM.
Mr. Ritter’s paper, "Modeling Viscoelasticity of Loudspeaker Suspensions using Retardation Spectra" was co-authored by Finn Agerkvist. Mr. Ritter was born in Germany in 1984. He graduated as B.Eng. from Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg in 2008 with a major in engineering physics and as M.Sc. (Eng) from Technical University of Denmark with a major in acoustics. His research interests include electroacoustic transducers, numerical methods in acoustics, psychoacoustics and general audio engineering. In addition to his academic studies Mr. Ritter has served as a freelance live concert sound engineer. His paper will appear in lecture session P11, on Friday Nov. 5, 2:30PM to 6:30PM.
Mr. Nanjundaswamy’s paper, "Perceptual Distortion-Rate Optimization of Long Term Prediction in MPEG AAC" was co-authored by Vinay Melkote, Emmanuel Ravelli, and Kenneth Rose. He graduated with a B.E. degree from the National Institute of Technology, Karnataka, India with a major in Electronics and Communications in 2004. He worked at Ittiam Systems, India, specializing in Audio codecs and post-processing for embedded platforms. He completed his M.S. degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of California, Santa Barbara, in 2009 and is currently pursuing his Ph.D. degree at UCSB under the guidance of Prof. Kenneth Rose. His research is focused towards Audio and Speech compression. His paper will be in lecture session P21, Sunday 7 November 2010, 9:00AM to 12:30.
“The Awards Committee maintains extremely high standards for Student Technical Papers,” Ron Maher reports. “It should be noted that there have been occasions in past years when no Student Paper Award was presented. That two papers were selected this year is extraordinary, and, indicative of the level of excellence which they represent.”
Co Chair Veronique Larcher adds that, “Both papers are now eligible for publication consideration in the Journal of the Audio Engineering Society. The AES extends this year’s winners our sincere congratulations for their superlative work.”
Photo 1: Tobias Ritter, Technical University of Denmark.
Photo 2: Tejaswi Nanjundaswamy, University of California, Santa Barbara
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A Preliminary Calendar of Events including comprehensive abstracts is posted at: http://www.aes.org/events/129/
The Audio Engineering Society was formed in 1948 by a group of concerned audio engineers. The AES counts over 14,000 members throughout the U.S., Latin America, Europe, Japan and the Far East. The organization serves as the pivotal force in the exchange and dissemination of technical information for the industry. For additional information visit http://www.aes.org