Biography

Brint Cooper is Associate Research Professor in the ECE Department at Johns Hopkins, where he received his undergraduate and doctoral degrees. For seven years, he worked in industry on phased array radar systems, pseudorandom sequences for jam-resistant communications, and co-channel satellite repeaters. For 33 years, he was with the US Army Research Laboratory (and predecessor R&D organizations) where he conducted research into algebraic methods for decoding cyclic channel codes, defined a collaborative Army research program for battlefield wireless networking, and evaluated the performance of developmental communications systems. In collaboration with Dr. R. Adams Cowley, the founder of Maryland’s storied Shock-Trauma Center, he led a team of three that devised the first emergency medical communication system (EMS) for Baltimore, MD, and the five surrounding counties, and was instrumental in securing funds for its development. He was Adjunct Professor of ECE from 1996 to 2001 at the University of Delaware and from 1998 to 2001 at Morgan State University.

His current research interests include error control coding, massive MIMO, THz communications, anomaly detection in wireless systems, and signal processing for LiDAR-based identification and classification systems.  He is the inventor of the one-step BCH decoder known as the "Cooper Philosophy."

 

Contact Information

Associate Research Professor

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

105 Barton Hall

The Johns Hopkins University

Baltimore, MD  21218

V: 410-516-7014

F: 410-516-2233

Email:  [email protected]

 

Research interests
Coding theory
Coding techniques
Communications