IEEE Signal Processing Magazine

CURRENT ISSUE

CURRENT ISSUE

March 2025

Raison d’Être: 2025 Edition [President’s Message]

In his January 2012 column for IEEE Signal Processing Magazine, K. J. Ray Liu, then president of the IEEE Signal Processing Society (SPS), highlighted the importance of establishing a formal community when individuals come together to create a professional society [1]. He emphasized that the Society’s primary mission, its raison d’être, is to serve its community, and the key to achieving this mission is to serve its members effectively.

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Ode to Masterfully Written Textbooks: And remembering Simon Haykin [From the Editor]

The tutorial "Introducing Information Metrics for Statistical Signal Processing," [A1] provided the inspiration for our cover in this issue. In their "Lecture Notes" column, Steve Kay and Kaushallya Adhikari invite us to "a leisurely stroll through the garden of the beautiful information-theoretic flowers that have blossomed over the years." This ends up being not only a pleasant stroll, but also an enriching one with useful insights into these measures and their interrelationships recounted with precision.

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January 2025

Spatial Frequencies and Degrees of Freedom: Their roles in near-field communications

As wireless technology begins to utilize physically larger arrays and/or higher frequencies, the transmitter and receiver will reside in each other’s radiative near field. This fact gives rise to unusual propagation phenomena, such as spherical wavefronts and beam focusing, creating the impression that new spatial dimensions—called degrees of freedom (DOF)—can be exploited in the near field.

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Special Issue on Near-Field Signal Processing: Communications, Sensing, and Imaging

Multichannel signal processing technologies are moving toward the deployment of small and densely packed sensors yielding extremely large aperture arrays (ELAAs) in order to provide higher angular resolution and beamforming gain. In particular, technologies are moving beyond the fifth-generation (5G) networks, wherein the adoption of ELAAs or surfaces and the exploitation of higher-frequency bands, e.g., terahertz

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