Author Biographies

Mr. Pranav Kumar received his M.Tech. from IIT (ISM), Dhanbad, in 2014, and is now pursuing a PhD at IIT, Patna. He is working as an assistant professor at Government Engineering College, Arwal. He has published and contributed to reputable journals and conferences. His research interests include computer vision, machine learning, pattern recognition, transfer learning, and domain adaptation.
Jimson Mathew is currently a professor at the Computer Science and Engineering Department of Indian Institute of Technology Patna, India. He received his Masters in computer engineering from Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore, and his Ph.D. degree in computer engineering from the University of Bristol, Bristol, U.K. He has held positions with the Centre for Wireless Communications, National University of Singapore; Bell Laboratories Research Lucent Technologies North Ryde, Australia; Royal Institute of Technology KTH, Stockholm, Sweden; and the Department of Computer Science, University of Bristol, UK. He holds multiple patents, is the co-author of three books, and has a total of more than 100 publications in reputable international journals and conferences. His research interests include fault-tolerant computing, hardware security, very-large-scale integration design, and design automation.
Rakesh Kumar Sanodiya (member of IEEE) received his Ph.D. degree from the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, IIT Patna, Patna, India, in 2019. He is currently working as an Assistant Professor with the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Indian Institute of Information Technology, Sri City. His current research interests include metric learning and transfer learning. He was the winner of the App Category of the Open Government Data Hackathon in 2017 and the second runner-up in the Open Government Data Hackathon, in 2018, and he received prizes in the Department-Wide Grand Challenge Smart Embedded Applications and IoT, in 2016. In 2017, he was part of a student team that received the Intel Higher Education Challenge (2017) at the Rapid Prototyping Camp on Cyber–Physical Systems.
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