The third-year Ph.D. candidate pioneering work on the “first switch effect” will help researchers understand the reliability of ferroelectric field effect transistors.

The ECE Ph.D. candidate recently won the Best Paper Award at the IEEE BiCMOS and Compound Semiconductor Integrated Circuits and Technology Symposium for the novel testing approach.

The ECE Ph.D. graduate, who is completing a research fellowship at Stanford University, was recognized for her research into more efficient AI computing.

The assistant director of research administration was lauded by his colleagues for his leadership and for fostering a culture of confidence and understanding.

James Shin, an electrical engineering major from Hoschton, Georgia, has received a 2025 Marshall Scholarship. He will study physics at the University of Cambridge and public policy at the University of Oxford to advance engineering in space.

The award will grow electronic packaging expertise and drive economic growth in Georgia.

The ECE professor’s highly cited 2013 paper has become an integral part of modern web search engines.

Researchers honored for their innovations in AI speech processing and nanomaterials for medicine and electronics.