Low-power special-purpose chip could make speech recognition ubiquitous in electronics.
Blog Archives
Microsystems Annual Research Conference (MARC) Featured Talk Award 2017
Mohamed Radwan Abdelhamid, Microsystems Annual Research Conference (MARC) Featured Talk Award, "Ultra Low-Power, High-Sensitivity Secure Wake-Up Transceiver for the Internet of Things," Feb. 2017.
Microsystems Annual Research Conference (MARC) Presentation Award 2017
Preet Garcha, Microsystems Annual Research Conference (MARC) Presentation Award, "Low Voltage Cold-Start System for Thermal Energy Harvesting using Integrated Magnetics," Feb. 2017.
Microsystems Annual Research Conference (MARC) Presentation Award
Sirma Orguc, Microsystems Annual Research Conference (MARC) Presentation Award, "0.3V Biopotential Sensor Interface for Stress Monitoring," Feb. 2017.
Microsystems Annual Research Conference (MARC) Presentation Award 2017
Priyanka Raina, Microsystems Annual Research Conference (MARC) Presentation Award, "Low power processor for real time video motion magnification," Feb. 2017.
2016 Student Research Preview (SRP) Award, 2017 IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC)
Priyanka Raina, 2016 Student Research Preview (SRP) Award, 2017 IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC), "An Energy-Scalable Co-processor for Blind Image Deblurring," Feb. 2017.
Taehoon Jeong, Analog Devices Outstanding Student Designer Award 2017
Taehoon Jeong, Analog Devices Outstanding Student Designer Award, Feb. 2017.
Secure wireless chargers
New chip would thwart the counterfeiting that plagues the market for wired device chargers.
Make it your business
StartMIT, a boot camp on entrepreneurship, gives students an intimate look into what it takes to build a company.
Engineers harness stomach acid to power tiny sensors
Ingestible electronic devices could monitor physiological conditions or deliver drugs.