Albert J. Williams 3rd

I was elected to the OES AdCom in 2022 for a term 2023 to 2026. Previously I have been OES VP Technical Activities, VP Conference Development, and VP Workshops and Symposiums. And I was the OES leader of JOAB, the Joint Oceans Administrative Board but became term limited in each of these positions in 2018 and my election to AdCom has been a pleasant return to activity in the Oceanic Engineering Society that I have missed.


I started an OES Chapter in the Providence Section, Region 1, during this hiatus and serve on the ExCom of the Providence Section. During my tenure there, I was able to obtain a Milestone for the Alvin human occupied submersible of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. The installation was October 21, 2022, in Woods Hole. The Milestone bronze plaque is shown in Fig. 1.
I am Scientist Emeritus at WHOI in the Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering department and have been a WHOI employee since 1969. My research has been on ocean mixing and deep-sea sediment transport. To study the former, I developed a high- resolution acoustic velocity sensor with which I measured velocity shear in the upper ocean to correlate to optical images (on 16mm movie film and later 8mm video tape). I photographed salt fingers at 1265m depth beneath the Mediterranean outflow in the eastern Atlantic. This double-diffusive phenomenon had been hypothesized to be a mechanism where warm salty water could exchange heat more rapidly than salt with a deeper less salty and cooler layer by way of interpenetrating fingers in the temperate and tropical ocean. Fig. 2 is a section of the salt-finger staircase outside the Strait of Gibraltar where warm, Mediterranean salty water overlies cooler, fresher Atlantic water.

The velocity sensor later was used to study benthic boundary layer turbulence associated with bedforms at 4800m depth that developed during benthic storms several times a year off New England. The measurements next extended to benthic stress measurements on the shelf at depths of 100m. Mixing in Gulf Stream warm core rings and also off southern California were measured with a RiNo (Richardson number) Float. Each of these subsequent endeavors required modification of the original BASS (Benthic Acoustic Stress Sensor). The most recent embodiment of the acoustic differential travel-time velocity sensor is MAVS (Modular Acoustic Velocity Sensor), shown in Fig. 4.
I became Scientist Emeritus in 2002 and am still employed at WHOI although my presence in my office has been rare during the COVID-19 pandemic. I miss the person-to-person interaction that had been regular until 2020. A partial remedy is a thrice weekly Zoom meeting I hold with my former colleagues from “Engineering Coffee.” Better than nothing and I hope that more personal meetings will become common again soon.

Another consequence of the pandemic is the interruption of the travel that my wife, Izzie, and I have enjoyed, originally associated with our research cruises to distant ports and more recently associated with IEEE workshops, symposiums, and OCEANS Conferences. We have enjoyed multiple trips to India associated first with the SYMPOL biennial symposium in Cochin, Kerala, and subsequently with preparations for OCEANS 2022 Cochin. Sadly, the pandemic prevented our participation in that OCEANS Conference. However, the lockdowns associated with the pandemic aided one endeavor of mine, the replacement of keel bolts in my wooden sailboat. Our forced return from a trip to Borneo in March 2020, a trip that we had arranged when I still thought OCEANS 2020 Singapore would take place, aided the keel bolt replacement. Quarantine during our return forced me to remain at home where I store Shadowfax, my boat, over the winter. And this gave me the opportunity to continue the work of replacing the keel-bolts, a story that I reported in the OES Beacon (https://beacon.ieeeoes.org/category/oes-beacon/september-2020-oes-beacon/).
The introduction of my boat into this story is significant because childhood sailing stories are partly responsible for my career as an oceanographer/engineer. Arthur Ransome’s “Swallows and Amazons” led me to construct an eight-foot pram sailing dingy at age 13 in an upstairs bedroom. Without a good plan for getting the boat downstairs and out, it required dismantling parts to get it down the stairs. But the construction was a valuable lesson in resilience. I offer Fig.5, photographed the day before Shadowfax was picked up by the boat hauler f


Dr. James V. Candy is the Chief Scientist for Engineering and former Director of the Center for Advanced Signal & Image Sciences at the University of California, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Dr. Candy received a commission in the USAF in 1967 and was a Systems Engineer/Test Director from 1967 to 1971. He has been a Researcher at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory since 1976 holding various positions including that of Project Engineer for Signal Processing and Thrust Area Leader for Signal and Control Engineering. Educationally, he received his B.S.E.E. degree from the University of Cincinnati and his M.S.E. and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering from the University of Florida, Gainesville. He is a registered Control System Engineer in the state of California. He has been an Adjunct Professor at San Francisco State University, University of Santa Clara, and UC Berkeley, Extension teaching graduate courses in signal and image processing. He is an Adjunct Full-Professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Dr. Candy is a Fellow of the IEEE and a Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America (ASA) and elected as a Life Member (Fellow) at the University of Cambridge (Clare Hall College). He is a member of Eta Kappa Nu and Phi Kappa Phi honorary societies. He was elected as a Distinguished Alumnus by the University of Cincinnati. Dr. Candy received the IEEE Distinguished Technical Achievement Award for the “development of model-based signal processing in ocean acoustics.” Dr. Candy was selected as a IEEE Distinguished Lecturer for oceanic signal processing as well as presenting an IEEE tutorial on advanced signal processing available through their video website courses. He was nominated for the prestigious Edward Teller Fellowship at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Dr. Candy was awarded the Interdisciplinary Helmholtz-Rayleigh Silver Medal in Signal Processing/Underwater Acoustics by the Acoustical Society of America for his technical contributions. He has published over 225 journal articles, book chapters, and technical reports as well as written three texts in signal processing, “Signal Processing: the Model-Based Approach,” (McGraw-Hill, 1986), “Signal Processing: the Modern Approach,” (McGraw-Hill, 1988), “Model-Based Signal Processing,” (Wiley/IEEE Press, 2006) and “Bayesian Signal Processing: Classical, Modern and Particle Filtering” (Wiley/IEEE Press, 2009). He was the General Chairman of the inaugural 2006 IEEE Nonlinear Statistical Signal Processing Workshop held at the Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge. He has presented a variety of short courses and tutorials sponsored by the IEEE and ASA in Applied Signal Processing, Spectral Estimation, Advanced Digital Signal Processing, Applied Model-Based Signal Processing, Applied Acoustical Signal Processing, Model-Based Ocean Acoustic Signal Processing and Bayesian Signal Processing for IEEE Oceanic Engineering Society/ASA. He has also presented short courses in Applied Model-Based Signal Processing for the SPIE Optical Society. He is currently the IEEE Chair of the Technical Committee on “Sonar Signal and Image Processing” and was the Chair of the ASA Technical Committee on “Signal Processing in Acoustics” as well as being an Associate Editor for Signal Processing of ASA (on-line JASAXL). He was recently nominated for the Vice Presidency of the ASA and elected as a member of the Administrative Committee of IEEE OES. His research interests include Bayesian estimation, identification, spatial estimation, signal and image processing, array signal processing, nonlinear signal processing, tomography, sonar/radar processing and biomedical applications.
Kenneth Foote is a Senior Scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. He received a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from The George Washington University in 1968, and a Ph.D. in Physics from Brown University in 1973. He was an engineer at Raytheon Company, 1968-1974; postdoctoral scholar at Loughborough University of Technology, 1974-1975; research fellow and substitute lecturer at the University of Bergen, 1975-1981. He began working at the Institute of Marine Research, Bergen, in 1979; joined the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in 1999. His general area of expertise is in underwater sound scattering, with applications to the quantification of fish, other aquatic organisms, and physical scatterers in the water column and on the seafloor. In developing and transitioning acoustic methods and instruments to operations at sea, he has worked from 77°N to 55°S.
René Garello, professor at Télécom Bretagne, Fellow IEEE, co-leader of the TOMS (Traitements, Observations et Méthodes Statistiques) research team, in Pôle CID of the UMR CNRS 3192 Lab-STICC.
Professor Mal Heron is Adjunct Professor in the Marine Geophysical Laboratory at James Cook University in Townsville, Australia, and is CEO of Portmap Remote Ocean Sensing Pty Ltd. His PhD work in Auckland, New Zealand, was on radio-wave probing of the ionosphere, and that is reflected in his early ionospheric papers. He changed research fields to the scattering of HF radio waves from the ocean surface during the 1980s. Through the 1990s his research has broadened into oceanographic phenomena which can be studied by remote sensing, including HF radar and salinity mapping from airborne microwave radiometers . Throughout, there have been one-off papers where he has been involved in solving a problem in a cognate area like medical physics, and paleobiogeography. Occasionally, he has diverted into side-tracks like a burst of papers on the effect of bushfires on radio communications. His present project of the Australian Coastal Ocean Radar Network (ACORN) is about the development of new processing methods and applications of HF radar data to address oceanography problems. He is currently promoting the use of high resolution VHF ocean radars, based on the PortMap high resolution radar.
Hanu Singh graduated B.S. ECE and Computer Science (1989) from George Mason University and Ph.D. (1995) from MIT/Woods Hole.He led the development and commercialization of the Seabed AUV, nine of which are in operation at other universities and government laboratories around the world. He was technical lead for development and operations for Polar AUVs (Jaguar and Puma) and towed vehicles(Camper and Seasled), and the development and commercialization of the Jetyak ASVs, 18 of which are currently in use. He was involved in the development of UAS for polar and oceanographic applications, and high resolution multi-sensor acoustic and optical mapping with underwater vehicles on over 55 oceanographic cruises in support of physical oceanography, marine archaeology, biology, fisheries, coral reef studies, geology and geophysics and sea-ice studies. He is an accomplished Research Student advisor and has made strong collaborations across the US (including at MIT, SIO, Stanford, Columbia LDEO) and internationally including in the UK, Australia, Canada, Korea, Taiwan, China, Japan, India, Sweden and Norway. Hanu Singh is currently Chair of the IEEE Ocean Engineering Technology Committee on Autonomous Marine Systems with responsibilities that include organizing the biennial IEEE AUV Conference, 2008 onwards. Associate Editor, IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering, 2007-2011. Associate editor, Journal of Field Robotics 2012 onwards.
Milica Stojanovic graduated from the University of Belgrade, Serbia, in 1988, and received the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from Northeastern University in Boston, in 1991 and 1993. She was a Principal Scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and in 2008 joined Northeastern University, where she is currently a Professor of electrical and computer engineering. She is also a Guest Investigator at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Milica’s research interests include digital communications theory, statistical signal processing and wireless networks, and their applications to underwater acoustic systems. She has made pioneering contributions to underwater acoustic communications, and her work has been widely cited. She is a Fellow of the IEEE, and serves as an Associate Editor for its Journal of Oceanic Engineering (and in the past for Transactions on Signal Processing and Transactions on Vehicular Technology). She also serves on the Advisory Board of the IEEE Communication Letters, and chairs the IEEE Ocean Engineering Society’s Technical Committee for Underwater Communication, Navigation and Positioning. Milica is the recipient of the 2015 IEEE/OES Distinguished Technical Achievement Award.
Dr. Paul C. Hines was born and raised in Glace Bay, Cape Breton. From 1977-1981 he attended Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, graduating with a B.Sc. (Hon) in Engineering-Physics.