Generated by Llama 3.3-70B| Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers | |
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| Title | Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers |
| Discipline | Electrical engineering, Radio engineering |
| Language | English |
| Edited by | Institute of Radio Engineers |
Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers was a monthly peer-reviewed journal published by the Institute of Radio Engineers from 1913 to 1962. The journal was established to provide a platform for radio engineers and electrical engineers to share their research and innovations in the field of radio communication and electrical engineering, with notable contributors including Guglielmo Marconi, Lee de Forest, and John Ambrose Fleming. The journal played a significant role in the development of radio technology and electronics, with many of its articles and papers being cited by researchers at Bell Labs, MIT, and Stanford University. The journal's content and scope were shaped by the work of prominent engineers and researchers, including Nikola Tesla, Thomas Edison, and Alexander Graham Bell.
The Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers was first published in January 1913, with John Stone Stone as its first editor, and was initially focused on the practical applications of radio engineering, with articles on topics such as amateur radio and radio broadcasting. Over the years, the journal expanded its scope to include more theoretical and research-oriented articles, with contributions from notable researchers at Columbia University, University of California, Berkeley, and Harvard University. The journal was published monthly, with a total of 12 issues per year, and was distributed to members of the Institute of Radio Engineers and other subscribers, including IBM, General Electric, and Westinghouse Electric Corporation. The journal's history is closely tied to the development of radio technology and electronics, with many of its articles and papers being cited by researchers at NASA, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
The Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers was published by the Institute of Radio Engineers, with its headquarters located in New York City, and was printed by McGraw-Hill, with distribution handled by American Institute of Electrical Engineers and Institution of Electrical Engineers. The journal was available in print and, later, in digital format, with online archives available through JSTOR and IEEE Xplore, and was indexed by Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar. The journal's publication details were managed by a team of editors and staff, including Alfred N. Goldsmith, Lloyd Espenschied, and Harold S. Black, who worked closely with researchers at University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, and California Institute of Technology.
The Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers published articles and papers on a wide range of topics related to radio engineering and electrical engineering, including radio communication, electronics, and telecommunication, with contributions from notable researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Carnegie Mellon University, and University of Michigan. The journal also published articles on the history of radio technology and electronics, as well as biographies of prominent engineers and researchers, including Michael Faraday, James Clerk Maxwell, and Heinrich Hertz. The journal's content and scope were shaped by the work of prominent engineers and researchers, including Vladimir Zworykin, Philo Farnsworth, and John Bardeen, who worked at Bell Labs, IBM, and Xerox PARC.
The Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers had a significant impact on the development of radio technology and electronics, with many of its articles and papers being cited by researchers at Stanford University, University of California, Los Angeles, and Georgia Institute of Technology. The journal played a key role in the establishment of the Institute of Radio Engineers as a major professional organization for radio engineers and electrical engineers, with many of its members going on to work at NASA, European Organization for Nuclear Research, and Los Alamos National Laboratory. The journal's influence can be seen in the work of researchers at MIT, Harvard University, and University of Cambridge, who have cited its articles and papers in their own research, including Tim Berners-Lee, Vint Cerf, and Bob Kahn.
The Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers had many notable contributors, including Guglielmo Marconi, Lee de Forest, and John Ambrose Fleming, who worked at Marconi Company, Federal Telegraph Company, and Edison Electric Light Company. Other notable contributors included Nikola Tesla, Thomas Edison, and Alexander Graham Bell, who worked at Westinghouse Electric Corporation, General Electric, and AT&T. The journal also published articles by prominent researchers at Bell Labs, IBM, and Xerox PARC, including Claude Shannon, John Bardeen, and William Shockley, who made significant contributions to the development of Information theory, Transistors, and Semiconductors. The journal's contributors also included notable engineers and researchers from University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, and California Institute of Technology, who worked on projects such as Colossus, ENIAC, and UNIVAC I. Category:Defunct scientific journals