News

March 9, 2009

Graduate Student Houle Gan, student of Professor Dan Jiao, receives IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society Graduate Research Award for 2008-2009

The IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society awards up to five PhD research
awards each year internationally. Houle's research is on computational
electromagnetic methods of significantly reduced complexity for
large-scale high-speed integrated circuit design. He will receive a cash
award of $2,500. The award will be announced in IEEE Antennas and
Propagation Magazine.
February 26, 2009

Lab-on-a-chip Wins First Prize in Burton D. Morgan Business Plan Competition

Professors Mithuna Thottethodi and T.N. Vijaykumar, along with doctoral student Ahmed Amin, received $30,000 in prize money and $5,000 worth of legal services for their business plan to investigate and apply lab-on-a-chip technology in order to manipulate fluids at microscopic scales.
February 25, 2009

2009 Distinguished Engineering Alumni Named

On February 20th, the College of Engineering honored alumnus Jeffrey Fisher (BSEE '80), along with 8 other Engineering alumni who have distinguished themselves in careers ranging from corporate executive to university president to entrepreneur.
February 23, 2009

2009 Distinguished Engineering Alumni Named

On February 20th, the College of Engineering honored alumnus Jeffrey Fisher (BSEE '80), along with 8 other Engineering alumni who have distinguished themselves in careers ranging from corporate executive to university president to entrepreneur.
February 9, 2009

Professor Edward J. Delp has received the Society Award from the IEEE Signal Processing Society of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.

The honor is the highest-level award bestowed by the IEEE Signal Processing Society. The organization recognized Delp for his "technical contributions to the areas of multimedia security and image and video coding." The Society Award honors outstanding technical contributions in a field within the scope of the IEEE Signal Processing Society and outstanding leadership in that field.
February 6, 2009

Professor Mark Lundstrom has been elected to the National Academy of Engineering.

Professor Mark Lundstrom, the Don and Carol Scifres Distinguished Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, whose research is in the area of semiconductor device physics, change carrier transport, computational electronics, physics and limits of nanotransistors, was elected “for leadership in microelectronics and nanoelectronics through research, innovative education, and unique applications of cyberinfrastructure.”
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