Toggle navigation
Information
Location, Dates & Hotel
About AFCEA
About IEEE ComSoc
About MILCOM and FAQ
2019 Mobile App
Board Members
Technical Program Committee
Technical Track Chairs
MILCOM Fact Sheet
SIGNAL Magazine
ComSoc Magazines
2018 Event Coverage
Program
Agenda
Schedule At A Glance
Speakers
Call for Papers
Technical Program
Unclassified Technical Papers
Unclassified Technical Papers Schedule
Restricted Access Technical Program
Technical Panels
Tutorials
Continuing Education
Author Information
Attend
Categories & Fees
Attendee Registration
Exhibitor Registration
Housing Information
Media Registration
Exhibitors & Sponsors
Exhibitor Listing
Sponsor Listing
Floor Plans
Contact Us
Toggle navigation
Information
Location, Dates & Hotel
About AFCEA
About IEEE ComSoc
About MILCOM and FAQ
2019 Mobile App
Board Members
Technical Program Committee
Technical Track Chairs
MILCOM Fact Sheet
SIGNAL Magazine
ComSoc Magazines
2018 Event Coverage
Program
Agenda
Schedule At A Glance
Speakers
Call for Papers
Technical Program
Unclassified Technical Papers
Unclassified Technical Papers Schedule
Restricted Access Technical Program
Technical Panels
Tutorials
Continuing Education
Author Information
Attend
Categories & Fees
Attendee Registration
Exhibitor Registration
Housing Information
Media Registration
Exhibitors & Sponsors
Exhibitor Listing
Sponsor Listing
Floor Plans
Contact Us
William "Chris" Headley, Ph.D.
Research Assistant Professor and Associate Director, Electronic Systems Lab
Ted & Karyn Hume Center for National Security & Technology
Profile
Dr. William "Chris" Headley is the Associate Director for the Electronic Systems Laboratory at the Virginia Tech Hume Center for National Security and Technology. With the Hume Center, he has served as a principle or co-principal investigator on a multitude of government and commercial projects totaling over $8M. He is currently the primary principal investigator for the Radio Frequency Machine Learning portfolio within the Hume Center. Outside of his Hume Center roles, he is a Research Assistant Professor, by courtesy, within Virginia Tech's Electrical and Computer Engineering department through which he advises Master's students and serves on both Master's and Ph.D. committees. His academic interests are currently in the intersections of wireless communications, machine learning, and outreach and education opportunities.
Sessions
Tutorial: Adversarial Radio Frequency Machine Learning (RFML) Using PyTorch
Back to the Search