Daniel W. Bliss

Daniel W. Bliss
Born1966
Alma materArizona State University (B.A.) University of California, San Diego (M.S., Ph.D.)
Known forfoundational work in MIMO radar, MIMO communications, and Electromagnetic radio frequency convergence
AwardsIEEE Warren D. White Award (2021) IEEE Fellow (2015)
Scientific career
Fieldswireless communications, remote sensing, signal processing, information theory, estimation theory
InstitutionsArizona State University

MIT Lincoln Laboratory

General Dynamics

Daniel W. Bliss (born 1966) is an American professor, engineer, and physicist. He is a Fellow of the IEEE and was awarded the IEEE Warren D. White award for outstanding technical advances in the art of radar engineering in 2021 for his contributions to MIMO radar, Multiple-Function Sensing and Communications Systems, and Novel Small-Scale Radar Applications. He is a professor in the School of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering at Arizona State University. He is also the director of the Center for Wireless Information Systems and Computational Architecture (WISCA).

He focuses on the fields of wireless communications, remote sensing, signal processing, information theory and estimation theory. He is responsible for foundational work in MIMO radar, MIMO communications, and RF convergence. He has also made contributions to biomedical anticipatory analytics.

He has also served as a member of the IEEE AESS Radar System Panel and as a Senior Editor of the IEEE Signal Processing Magazine.