Soo-Young Lee
Director, Brain Science Research Center, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology

Soo-Young Lee received B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees from Seoul National University in 1975, Korea Advanced Institute of Science in 1977, and Polytechnic Institute of New York in 1984, respectively. From 1977 to 1980 he worked for the Taihan Engineering Co., Seoul, Korea. From 1982 to 1985 he also worked for General Physics Corporation at Columbia, MD, USA. In early 1986 he joined the Department of Electrical Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, as an Assistant Professor and now is a Full Professor at the Department of Bio and Brain Engineering and also Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. In 1997 he established Brain Science Research Center, which is the main research organization for the Korean Brain Neuroinformatics Research Program. The research program is one of the Korean Brain Research Promotion Initiatives sponsored by Korean Ministry of Science and Technology from 1998 to 2008, and currently about 35 Ph.D. researchers have joined the research program from many Korean universities.

He is a Past-President of Asia-Pacific Neural Network Assembly, and has contributed to International Conference on Neural Information Processing as Conference Chair (2000), Conference Vice Co-Chair (2003), and Program Co-Chair (1994, 2002). Dr. Lee is the Editor-in-Chief of the newly-established online/offline journal with double-blind review process, Neural Information Processing-Letters and Reviews, and is on Editorial Board for Neural Processing Letters and Cognitive Neurodynamics. He received Leadership Award and Presidential Award from International Neural Network Society in 1994 and 2001, respectively, and APPNA (Asia-Pacific Neural Network Assembly) Service Award in 2004. His research interests have resided in artificial brain, the human-like intelligent Systems based on biological information processing mechanism in our brain. He has worked on the auditory models from the cochlea to the auditory cortex for noisy speech processing, information-theoretic binaural processing models for sound localization and speech enhancement, the unsupervised pro-active developmental models of human knowledge with multi-modal man-machine interactions, and the top-down selective attention models for superimposed pattern recognitions. Especially, he is interested in combining computational neuroscience and information theory, of which example is Independent Component Analysis for blind signal separation and feature extraction. His research scope covers the mathematical models, neuromorphic chips, and real-world applications. Also, he had recently extended his research into multimodal brain-computer interfaces.