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Mérouane Debbah

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Mérouane Debbah
Alma materÉcole normale supérieure Paris-Saclay
AwardsLouis Bachelier Fellow (2021), AAIA Fellow (2021),[1] Eurasip Fellow (2021),[2] SEE Membre émérite (2018), IEEE Fellow (2015),[3] WWRF Fellow (2008) [4]
Scientific career
Fields6G, machine learning, random matrix theory, game theory, statistical inference, wireless communications
InstitutionsKhalifa University, Technology Innovation Institute, CentraleSupélec, University of Paris-Saclay, Huawei R&D France
Doctoral studentsVeronica Belmega, Ejder Bastug, Mehdi Bennis, Emil Björnson (Post-doc), Romain Couillet, Nadia Fawaz, Chongwen Huang, Maxime Guillaud (Post-doc) Jakob Hoydis, Walid Saad, Alessio Zappone (Post-doc)

Mérouane Debbah is a researcher, educator and technology entrepreneur. He has founded several public and industrial research centers, start-ups and held executive positions in ICT companies. He is professor at Khalifa University in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates and founding director of the Khalifa University 6G Research Center.[5] His research has been at the interface of fundamental mathematics, algorithms, statistics, information and communication sciences with a special focus on random matrix theory and learning algorithms. In the AI field, he is known for his work on large language models, distributed AI systems for networks and semantic communications. In the communication field, he has been at the heart of the development of small cells (4G), massive MIMO (5G) and large intelligent surfaces (6G) technologies. He received more than 40 IEEE best-paper awards for his contributions to both fields and according to research.com is ranked as the best scientist in France in the field of electronics and electrical engineering.[6]

Early life and Education

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Mérouane Debbah is a former student in Algeria of Lycée Cheikh Bouamama[7] (ex-Descartes, Algiers, Algeria). After his classes préparatoires in Lycée Henri IV (Paris, France), he entered the École normale supérieure Paris-Saclay in 1996 and obtained his PhD degree in 2002. His PhD thesis focused on a mathematical framework called free probability theory (a line of research which parallels aspects of classical probability in a non-commutative context) for the design of networks.

Work

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Mérouane Debbah started his career at Motorola Labs in Saclay in 1999. In 2002, he joined the Telecommunication Research Center of Vienna in Austria as a senior researcher. His work focused on Information Theory and the development of Models using maximum entropy principles.

From 2003 to 2007, he was an assistant professor at Eurecom in Sophia-Antipolis. His work focused mainly on the mathematical foundations of networks with the development of random matrix theory methods[8] and game theory methods for signal processing and networks.

In 2007, he was appointed full professor at CentraleSupélec (campus of Gif-sur-Yvette) at the age of 31. At the same time, he founded and was director of the Alcatel-Lucent chair on flexible radio.[9] This was the first industrial chair in telecommunication in France with close ties between CentraleSupélec and Bell Labs.[10] The chair was at the heart of the development of the small cells and massive MIMO technologies, which were key technologies for respectively 4G and 5G. His pioneering work on Self-Organized Networks (SON) algorithms and Random Matrix Theory (RMT) not only advanced theoretical understanding but also facilitated the practical realization of scalable and high-performance 4G and 5G networks The chair focused also on training top scientists and formed more than 45 PhD and post-doctorial researchers, many of whom have become global leaders in the research field. By 2017, the telecommunication department of CentraleSupélec was ranked number one in France and number two in Europe.[11] During that period, the European Commission awarded him an ERC (European Research Council) grant on random complex networks and an ERC POC (proof of concept) on wireless edge caching.

In 2014, he joined Huawei France as vice-president R&D and was the founding director of the Huawei Mathematical and Algorithmic Sciences Lab[12] in Boulogne-Billancourt, with a special focus on mathematical sciences applied to AI, wireless, optical and networking systems. At the end of 2018, the lab established had more than 200 researchers and was considered as one of the very top places in the world for industrial R&D in the field of communication networks. The initial focus of the lab on 5G and polar codes was a massive win for the company, which had built up a significant patents position in the domain and were adopted by 3GPP, the standards group that presides over cellular technology. He contributed to more than 40 patents in the field.[13]

In 2018, he advocates the need to invest massively in the mathematics of computing and established a year later as founding director the Lagrange Mathematics and Computing Research center in Paris.[14] The Lagrange research center [15] focused on the promotion of fundamental research on the foundations of mathematics of computing and data science, as well as to expand the horizons of the field by exploring other scientific disciplines through a computational and mathematics lens.[16] The center, which hosted several Medal Fields,[17] was built on a unique innovative structure model for industry, based on open long-term research grants that support pioneering projects for top scientists. The center was a precursor in the development of the fundamentals of AI using advanced mathematical tools with disruptive projects on Mean Field Game Theory, Optimal Transport Theory, Topos Theory and Bayesian Methods just to name a few.

In 2021, he joined the new Technology Innovation Institute in Abu Dhabi as chief researcher. The institute aimed to bring together top tier talent from across the globe to research and develop disruptive technological innovations for the benefit of science, the economy and the environment. He founded the AI and Digital Science Research Center with a focus on telecommunications, AI, and cyber-security. Predicting the massive use of generative AI tools, he focused the center on Large Language Models which was a massive win for the institute. By 2023, the center grew to more than 80 people and was pioneer in the development of large language models with the development of NOOR[18] (upon its release, largest language model in Arabic) released in 2022 and Falcon[19] LLM (upon its release, top ranked open source large language model[20]) released in 2023. The Falcon Foundation,[21] with an initial fund of $300m, was also created as a non-profit organisation to support open source AI research projects in collaboration with academia and industry leaders. The Falcon Model Series and The Falcon Foundation have positioned the UAE as a global leader [22] in the generative AI field.

In 2023, he was appointed full professor at Khalifa University in Abu Dhabi and established as founding director the Khalifa University 6G Research Center. Advocating the vision of a world of massive collective artificial intelligence, his work focused on developing the infrastructure, protocols and platforms that connect and ground intelligence. Jointly with the Telecommunications and Digital Government Regulatory Authority (TDRA), his group releases the same year the UAE's Strategic Vision for 6G[23] to drive innovation and setting ambitious goals for the next generation of wireless communication.

In 2024, he puts into place as chair the IEEE Large Generative AI Models in Telecom (GenAINet) Emerging Technology Initiative.[24] and launches the first open leaderboard for large language models (LLMs) focused on telecom applications. With his group, he pioneers the concept of TelecomGPT, the first comprehensive large language model (LLM) tailored for the telecom domain.[25] TelecomGPT becomes rapidly a reference in the field and provides key LLM evaluation benchmarks in the telecom domain.

Professional recognition

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  • SEE Blondel Medal (2020), IEEE/SEE Glavieux Prize Award (2011)[26]
  • EMEA Industrial Innovation Award of the IEEE Communications Society (2024), IEEE Radio Communications Committee Technical Recognition Award (2019)[27]

His papers have received more than 40 awards,[28] among which:

  • 2024 IEEE ComSoc CSIM TC Best Journal Paper Award
  • 2024 IEEE Communications Society Leonard G. Abraham Prize[29]
  • 2024 IEEE Communications Society Best Tutorial Paper Award[30]
  • 2023 IEEE Communications Society Award for Advances in Communication[31]
  • 2023 IEEE Communications Society Fred W. Ellersick Prize[32]
  • 2022 IEEE Communications Society Outstanding Paper Award[33]
  • 2021 IEEE Marconi Prize Paper Award[34]
  • 2021 EURASIP Best Paper Award [35]
  • 2019 IEEE Communications Society Young Author Best Paper Award[36]
  • 2018 IEEE Marconi Prize Paper Award[37]
  • 2017 EURASIP Best Paper Award[38]
  • 2016 IEEE Communications Society Best Tutorial Paper Award[39]
  • 2015 IEEE Communications Society Leonard G. Abraham Prize[40]
  • 2015 IEEE Communications Society Fred W. Ellersick Prize[41]

References

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  1. ^ "AAIA Fellows | Asia-Pacific Artificial Intelligence Association".
  2. ^ "EURASIP Fellows | European Association For Signal Processing".
  3. ^ "IEEE Fellows 2015 | IEEE Communications Society".
  4. ^ "WWRF Fellows | Wireless World Research Forum".
  5. ^ "Merouane announced as founding director of the 6G center at Khalifa University".
  6. ^ "Research.com is a leading academic research portal that ranks the world's top scientists across different categories and serves as a global benchmark".
  7. ^ "Lycée Descartes Alger ; Lycée Fromentin Alger ; Lycée Bouamama Alger ; Algérie". www.lyceedescartesalger.fr (in French).
  8. ^ Couillet, Romain; Debbah, Mérouane (29 September 2011). Random Matrix Methods for Wireless Communications. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107011632.
  9. ^ "Alcatel-Lucent Chair on Flexible Radio".
  10. ^ "Merouane Debbah: At the heart of future telecommunications". Université Paris-Saclay. 23 September 2020.
  11. ^ "ShanghaiRanking's Global Ranking of Academic Subjects".
  12. ^ "Tangente Mag".
  13. ^ "Merouane Debbah's inventor profile on Google Patents".
  14. ^ "Huawei opens research center in Paris".
  15. ^ "Lagrange Research Center Website".
  16. ^ "Huawei opens Mathematics Research Center to drive ICT innovation". Financialexpress.
  17. ^ "Huawei and French mathematics". Financialexpress.
  18. ^ "NOOR LLM Model".
  19. ^ "Abu Dhabi-based TII launches its own version of ChatGPT".
  20. ^ "FALCON LLM".
  21. ^ "TCould Falcon become the Linux of AI?". Middle East AI News.
  22. ^ "The UAE the third-most-important country for AI, after America and China". The Economist.
  23. ^ "UAE's Strategic Vision for 6G Connectivity". 13 July 2024.
  24. ^ "Large Generative AI Models in Telecom (GenAINet) Emerging Technology Initiative | IEEE Communications Society".
  25. ^ "Abu Dhabi researchers create first-of-its-kind telecom LLM".
  26. ^ "Joint Awards". Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).
  27. ^ "Awards – IEEE Communications Society Radio Communications Technical Committee".
  28. ^ "Debbah's IEEE Author Profile".
  29. ^ "The IEEE Communications Society Leonard G. Abraham Prize | IEEE Communications Society".
  30. ^ "IEEE Communications Society Best Tutorial Paper Award".
  31. ^ "The IEEE Communications Society Award for Advances in Communication".
  32. ^ "The IEEE Communications Society Fred W. Ellersick Prize | IEEE Communications Society".
  33. ^ "IEEE Communications Society Outstanding Paper Award".
  34. ^ "IEEE Marconi Prize Paper Award in Wireless Communications | IEEE Communications Society".
  35. ^ "EURASIP Best Paper Award".
  36. ^ "The IEEE Communications Society Young Author Best Paper Award | IEEE Communications Society".
  37. ^ "IEEE Marconi Prize Paper Award in Wireless Communications | IEEE Communications Society".
  38. ^ "2017 EURASIP Best Paper Award for the Journal on Wireless Communications and Networking | Large Networks and Systems Group (LANEAS)".
  39. ^ "The IEEE Communications Society Best Tutorial Paper Award | IEEE Communications Society".
  40. ^ "The IEEE Communications Society Leonard G. Abraham Prize | IEEE Communications Society".
  41. ^ "The IEEE Communications Society Fred W. Ellersick Prize | IEEE Communications Society".
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