Mohamed Younis honored for contributions to modern communication technologies

Published: Dec 13, 2024

Man poses for camera outside. Bushes with red berries and brick building in background.
Mohamed Younis (Marlayna Demond '11/UMBC)

Mohamed Younis, professor and chair of the Department of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering, has been honored by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Communications Society for his significant and lasting contributions to the advancement of modern communication technologies. The award was announced December 9 at the society’s Global Communications Conference in Cape Town, South Africa. In particular, Younis was honored by the IEEE technical committee on internet of things, ad hoc, and sensor networks for his impactful contributions to these frontier areas of communications. 

The proliferation of mobile phones, smart devices, and sensors such as cameras has transformed the communications landscape in recent decades. Oftentimes, diverse devices, such as autonomous vehicles and wearable sensors, talk to other devices without relying on pre-existing communications infrastructure such as routers, a set-up called an ad hoc network.

Younis’ work has advanced the expanding scope of communications technology, while also working to keep these methods reliable and secure. He has developed algorithms for networks of moveable sensor nodes, for example drones on a search-and-rescue mission, to recover from the failure of individual nodes; has created new ways to send signals directly from air to underwater; and has studied ways to protect the privacy of data sent from medical devices and sensors, among many other contributions.

Four men stand in group. One presents a certificate to another. Screen displays slide that reads "IOT-AHSN 2024 Technical Achievement and Recognition Award"
Mohamed Younis (second from left) receives the IoT, Ad Hoc and Sensor Networks 2024 Technical Achievement and Recognition Award at the IEEE Global Communications Conference in South Africa. (Photo courtesy of Younis)

“This award was a surprise to me—it made me happy,” says Younis, who traveled to South Africa to receive it. “It’s a recognition from the community that means a lot.”

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