James H. McClellan is
Byers Professor of Signal Processing at the
Georgia Institute of Technology. He is widely known for his creation of the McClellan transform and for his co-authorship of the
Parks-McClellan filter design algorithm.
Biography
James H. McClellan received his B.S. in
Electrical Engineering from
Louisiana State University in 1969. He went on to receive an M.S. (1972) and a Ph.D. (1973) from
Rice University. In 1973, he joined the research staff of
MIT's
Lincoln Laboratory. He later became a professor at MIT's
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science department before leaving to join
Schlumberger. Since 1987, he has been at the
Georgia Institute of Technology. Prof. McClellan is a Fellow of the
IEEE. He received the
Acoustics,
Speech, and
Signal Processing Technical Achievement Award in 1987, the Signal Processing Society Award in 1996, and the Jack S. Kilby Signal Processing Medal in 2004.
Books
- Number Theory in Digital Signal Processing, J. H. McClellan and C. M. Rader, Prentice-Hall, Inc., Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1979, ISBN 0-84-937177-5.
- Computer-Based Exercises for Signal Processing Using MATLAB, J. H. McClellan, C. S. Burrus, A. V. Oppenheim, T. W. Parks, R.W. Schafer, H. W. Schuessler, Prentice Hall, 1998, ISBN 0-13-789009-5.
- Signal Processing First: A Multimedia Approach, J. H. McClellan, R.W. Schafer, M.A. Yoder, Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1998, ISBN 0-13-090999-8.
References
External links