The philanthropic program, co-founded by ECE graduate Mel Coker, gives underrepresented student groups soft skills training and valuable networking opportunities, helping them to land jobs and become leaders in the workforce.
The ECE Ph.D. student was recognized during the Student Paper Competition, and research from three other ECE-affiliated groups were presented at the conference.
The ECE professor won the award for ground-breaking developments to power regulation and energy harvesting technologies, and outstanding contributions to analog microcircuit education.
The Strategic Energy Institute and the Energy, Policy, and Innovation Center at Georgia Tech are proud to announce the winner of the James G. Campbell Fellowship and the 2024 cohort of the annual Spark Awards.
Georgia Tech electrical and computer engineering students will now benefit from an expanded tapeout-to-silicon curriculum and have access to Apple engineers to better prepare for a career in hardware engineering.
The novel approach developed by ECE Ph.D. graduate is aimed at being used for pleural effusion monitoring and has the potential for future expanded uses with many diseases.
Spearheaded by Professor Santiago Grijalva, the NSF-backed project is set to enhance grid reliability and cost-efficiency with AI-driven decentralized optimization for renewables.
The Ph.D. candidate will pursue research on advancing deep learning infrastructure to meet the computational needs to run ever-evolving large language models.
Ph.D. candidate Zishen Wan was recognized for his novel AI perception system design, while Avanish Narumanch was recognized as one of the top undergraduate researchers.
Backed by the National Science Foundation, the project uses computer games and visualizations to help students understand the often challenging topics of semiconductor and microelectronic physics.