News Highlights
The latest updates and briefs from the Department of Electrical and Computing Engineering.
The latest updates and briefs from the Department of Electrical and Computing Engineering.
2019 Ph.D. graduate Patricia Gonzalez and her advisor Mircea Stan detailed a signal processing algorithm for asynchronous computing—an approach that mimics neural networks to continually parse and transmit bytes of information—in a paper that earned Gonzalez a top student paper award at IEEE's Latin American Symposium on Circuits and Systems. They then addressed the theoretical foundations of asynchronous computing, earning a best paper award at the November 2019 Asilomar Conference on Signals, Systems and Computers. Asynchronous computing allows sensors to process information while using very low power. READ MORE.
Arthur W. Lichtenberger, research professor in electrical and computer engineering, joined co-authors from the California Institute of Technology and the Universidad de Concepción of Chile to develop a faster and more accurate way to calibrate radio telescope receivers. Their programmable calibration load offers a dramatic improvement over standard calibration methods that are manual and binary. READ MORE.
Mool C. Gupta, Langley Distinguished Professor in electrical and computer engineering, has engaged in this research for more than 35 years, the last 16 at UVA where he serves as founding director of the National Science Foundation Industry-University Cooperative Research Center for Lasers and Plasmas. His contributions to laser-material interactions enhance the performance of solar cells, wind turbines and photonic devices and support lunar missions. READ MORE.
Kyusang Lee, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering and materials science and engineering, built the equivalent of a human eye and its visual cortex to be used as optical sensors for autonomous vehicles, robotics, manufacturing processes or surveillance systems. Lee's device promises to be 1,000 times more efficient in computing than current technology. READ MORE.
Keith Williams, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering, has been working remotely to prototype masks that could be fitted with disposable filters. His design blends plastic and metal 3-D printing with vacuum forming and other techniques. READ MORE.
UVA Engineering’s Center for Research in Intelligent Storage and Processing in Memory, or CRISP, researchers have received their first patent.
Mona Zebarjadi, assistant professor in the Charles L. Brown Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, co-authored one of the most read Scientific Reports articles in physics for 2018.