David L. Neuhoff was born in Rockville Centre, New York in 1948. He received the B.S.E. from Cornell University in 1970 and the M.S. and Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University in 1972 and 1974, respectively.
In 1974, he joined the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, where he is now Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. From 1984-1989 he was Associate Chairman of the Systems Science and Engineering Division of the EECS Department. He spent Sept. 1989 through June 1990 and Jan. through May 1997 on sabbatical at Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ. His research and teaching interests are in communications, information theory, and signal processing, especially data compression, quantization, image and video coding, source-channel coding, Shannon theory, high-resolution quantization theory, data synchronization, halftoning, and distributed source coding for sensor networks.
Dr. Neuhoff is a Fellow of the IEEE. He was Associate Editor for Source Coding for the IEEE Transactions on Information Theory , 1986- 1989. He served on the Board of Governors of the IEEE Information Theory Society, 1988-90 and 2002 to the present. He chaired the IEEE Southeastern Michigan Chapter of Division I in 1978, co-chaired the 1986 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory in Ann Arbor, and served as tutorial chair for ICASSP '95.