James L. Flanagan

James L. Flanagan
Born (1925-08-26)August 26, 1925
Greenwood, Mississippi
Died August 25, 2015(2015-08-25) (aged 89)
Warren Township, New Jersey
Nationality American
Fields Electrical engineering
Notable awards ASA Gold Medal (1986)
IEEE Edison Medal (1986)
Marconi Prize (1992)
National Medal of Science (1996)
IEEE Medal of Honor (2005)

James Loton Flanagan (August 26, 1925 August 25, 2015) was an electrical engineer, and was Rutgers University's vice president for research until 2004. He is also director of Rutgers' Center for Advanced Information Processing and the Board of Governors Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering.

Biography

He was chosen as the 2005 recipient of the Research and Development Council of New Jersey's Science/Technology Medal. He worked at Bell Laboratories for 33 years before he joined Rutgers. He has worked in voice communications, computer techniques, and electroacoustic systems. At Bell Laboratories he was the department head of the Acoustics Research Department for many years, and managed and supported work such as James E. West's invention of the electret microphone, Bishnu S. Atal's work on speech coding, David Berkley and Gary Elko's work on acoustics, Jont Allen and Joe Hall's work on psychoacoustics, James D. Johnston's work on perceptual audio coding mp3, work on speech synthesis, and Lawrence Rabiner and Aaron Rosenberg (and others) work on speech recognition. Flanagan holds the patent on the modern artificial larynx design.[1] During his tenure, first as department head, and then Laboratory Director, many advancements in signal processing, psychoacoustics, array microphone processing, digital loudspeakers, and other pioneering achievements were reduced to practice.

Flanagan has been a resident of Warren Township, New Jersey.[2] He died on August 25, 2015.[3]

Awards and honors

He is the author of more than 200 papers and two books, and holds 50 patents. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering.

References

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