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Konstantinos Psounis

Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Computer Science

Education

  • 1997, Bachelor's Degree, Electrical and Computer Engineering, National Technical University of Athens
  • Doctoral Degree, Electrical Engineering, Stanford University
  • Master's Degree, Electrical Engineering, Stanford University

Biography

Konstantinos Psounis is a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and of Computer Science at the University of Southern California. Prior to this he was an Assistant Professor and then an Associate Professor at the same university. He graduated first in his class from the department of Electrical and Computer Engineering of National Technical University of Athens, Greece, and completed an M.S. and a Ph.D. degree in Electrical Engineering at Stanford University, California, as a Stanford graduate fellow.

Konstantinos works on modeling, performance analysis, algorithm design, and system implementation for efficient and privacy-preserving networked, distributed systems, including the Internet and the web, data centers and cloud systems, WiFi/cellular and spectrum sharing systems, sensor and IoT systems, mobile ad hoc and delay tolerant networks, peer to peer systems, and autonomous vehicles robotics and drones systems. He is the author of more than 100 research papers on these topics which have received more than 10000 citations. He has received faculty awards and funding from numerous governmental agencies and industry leaders. He is an IEEE Fellow and an ACM Distinguished Member.

Research Summary

My research interests lie in the area of Networked Distributed Systems which fascinates me for its breadth, spanning from hands-on system-design all the way to advanced mathematical analysis, and for the direct impact that it has to people’s lives, exemplified by the profound changes that the Internet, the World Wide Web, and the cellular network have brought to our lives in the recent past, the profound changes that data centers and the cloud recently brought to the way companies operate and offer services to us, and the profound changes that autonomus systems involving cars robots and drones will bring pretty soon.

More specifically, I work on modeling, performance analysis, algorithm design, and system implementation for efficient and privacy-preserving networked, distributed systems, including the Internet and the web, data centers and cloud systems, WiFi/cellular and spectrum sharing systems, sensor and IoT systems, mobile ad hoc and delay tolerant networks, peer to peer systems, and autonomous vehicles robotics and drones systems.

Awards

  • 2021 CA-Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy Wildfire Detection and Fighting Using a Network of Collaborative Drones
  • 2020 NSF SaTC Frontier multi-Insitutional grant on Protecting Personal Data Flow on the Internet.
  • 2020 NSF NeTS Network-Enabled Cooperative Perception for Future Autonomous Vehicles.
  • 2019 ACM Distinguished Member
  • 2019 NSF NeTS Privacy-Preserving Mobile Crowdsourcing.
  • 2019 Cisco Systems Virtual and augmented reality over next generation WiFi.
  • 2017 IEEE Fellow
  • 2016 IEEE Distinguished Member of IEEE Infocom TPC Award
  • 2016 Cisco Systems Data-driven formal optimization of data centers
  • 2016 NSF NeTS Spectrum Sharing Systems for Wireless Networks: Performance and Privacy Challenges.
  • 2016 Adant Technologies Using reconfigurable antenna systems with WiFi communication devices.
  • 2016 Huawei Technologies Addressing wireless bandwidth demand via asynchronously coordinated multi-cell deployments.
  • 2015 Adant Technologies Asynchronous coordination of WiFi transmitters equipped with smart antennas for enhanced spectral efficiency.
  • 2014 Cisco Systems Rateless encoded UDP for error-resilient wireless links.
  • 2014 ACM Notable Article in Computing - Best of 2013
  • 2014 NSF EARS Future Wireless Broadband Access: Cross-Optimizing Hardware, Physical and Network Layers.
  • 2013 VSoE MEPC Business Plan Competition - 2nd place
  • 2011 DoCoMo Labs Research Grant
  • 2011 Cisco Systems Efficient airtime allocation in wireless networks.
  • 2011 Ming Hsieh Institute MHI Grant on Large scale software radio testbed.
  • 2009 ACM Senior Member Award
  • 2009 METRANS Transportation Center METRANS transportation center Grant/Award
  • 2009 Army Research Laboratory ARL Grant on Quality of Information-Aware Networks for Tactical Applications.
  • 2008 NSF NSF REU site Grant/Award
  • 2008 Cisco Systems Cisco Systems Grant and Best Presentation Award
  • 2008 NSF NSF NeTS Grant/Award
  • 2008 Cisco Systems Cisco Systems Grant/Award
  • 2008 IEEE IEEE Senior Member Award
  • 2007 METRANS Transportation Center METRANS research grant/award
  • 2005 Zumberge Foundation Zumberge award
  • 2005 National Science Foundation NSF NeTS grant/award
  • 2004 Viterbi School of Engineering Charles Lee Powel Assistant Professor Scholarship Award
  • 1997 National Technical University of Athens Best-student National Technical University of Athens award
  • 1997 Stanford University Illeana and Eric Benhamou Stanford Graduate Fellowship
  • 1992 Hellenic National Foundation of Scholarships (IKY) award
  • 1992 Technical Institution of Greece (TEE) award
Appointments
  • Assoc Chair, Ming Hsieh Department of Electrical of Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering - Systems
  • Ming Hsieh Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering - Systems
  • Thomas Lord Department of Computer Science
Office
  • RTH 409
  • Ronald Tutor Hall of Engineering
  • 3710 McClintock Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90089
  • USC Mail Code: 2562
Contact Information
  • (213) 740-4453
  • kpsounis@usc.edu
Links