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Researchers at UC San Diego and San Diego Zoo Global have joined forces to save the critically endangered northern white rhino from extinction. They are developing flexible robotic catheters that could aid in artificial insemination and embryo transfer on rhinos.

 

Full story: jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?id=2772

 

Photos by: David Baillot/UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering

Engineers at the UC San Diego Center for Wearable Sensors have developed a smartphone case and app that could make it easier for patients to record and track their blood glucose readings, whether they’re at home or on the go.

 

Press release: jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?id=2388

Dec. 10, 2014

Photos by Matthew Howard (E’17 – Computer Engineering)

Researchers at UC San Diego and San Diego Zoo Global have joined forces to save the critically endangered northern white rhino from extinction. They are developing flexible robotic catheters that could aid in artificial insemination and embryo transfer on rhinos.

 

Full story: jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?id=2772

 

Photos by: David Baillot/UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering

Dec. 10, 2014

Photos by Matthew Howard (E’17 – Computer Engineering)

Soonhyeong Choi, a graduate student in Electrical and Computer Engineering, working with Graduate Student Instructor Stanley Lewis in Peter Gaskell’s ROB 550, Robotic Systems Laboratory in the Ford Robotics Building on the North Campus of the University of Michigan on Tuesday, February 1, 2022.

 

The course is a multidisciplinary laboratory course with exposures to sensing, reasoning, and acting for physically-embodied systems. Intro to kinematics, localization and mapping, planning, control, user interfaces. Design, build, integration, and test of mechanical, electrical, and software systems.

 

Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (Dec. 5, 2025) Midshipmen from the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department showcase their projects at Hopper Hall. As the undergraduate college of our country's naval service, the Naval Academy prepares young men and women to become professional officers of competence, character, and compassion in the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Sarah M. Thielen)

Computer Engineering Undergraduate Gurpreet Singh Kalsi undergoes the final obstacle test at the 2019 Applied Collegiate Exoskeleton Competition inside the Bob and Betty Beyster Building on North Campus in Ann Arbor Michigan on Saturday May 18, 2019.

Six obstacles in all were constructed to test the durability, balance and effectiveness of each team's model. University of Michigan's STARX team won the maximum amount of points from each obstacle test and took home first place at the competition.

Photo: Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing

Dr. John Ventura (Electrical & Computer Engineering) was honored with the University's highest honor for faculty and staff, the Distinguished Lasallian Educator of the Year. Pictured above with Brother Dominic Ehrmantraut, Director of Mission, and President Smarrelli.

Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Necmiye Ozay troubleshoots with EECS Graduate Student Research Assistant Petter Nilsson at Mcity Test Facility in Ann Arbor, MI. on September 13, 2017.

Ozay’s group designs algorithms that can take information about the rules of the road, the specs of the car, and the laws of physics and then produce a program that enables the car to drive itself safely. Unlike programming designed for specific models of cars in particular locations, this more general way to program a self-driving car can work for different vehicles in different countries.

Photo by Robert Coelius

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Michigan Engineering

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Xinjing Huang, Graduate Student Research Assistant for Electrical and Computer Engineering, displays a transparent solar cell at ECE Professor Stephen Forrest’s lab at 1437 EECS on North Campus in Ann Arbor, MI on September 3, 2021.

The new process for generating organic photovoltaics (OPVs) incorporates non-fullerene acceptors and is resulting in expected operation lifetimes of 30 years, making them suitable for niche applications that including installation inside building windows.

OPVs are flexible, can be manufactured relatively inexpensively and recent developments by Forrests group have proven them to be semi-transparent as well as efficient.

Photo: Robert Coelius/University of Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing

Kurtis Kredo II (center) helps students Fatemah Alzayadi (left) and Jerson Rosales (right) in Advanced Logic Design (EECE 343) work on projects during their lab in OCNL 346 on Tuesday, March 10, 2020 in Chico, Calif.

(Jason Halley/University Photographer/CSU, Chico)

Researchers at UC San Diego and San Diego Zoo Global have joined forces to save the critically endangered northern white rhino from extinction. They are developing flexible robotic catheters that could aid in artificial insemination and embryo transfer on rhinos.

 

Full story: jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?id=2772

 

Photos by: David Baillot/UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering

Maia Hoberman, Computer Engineering BSE Student, meets with a job recruiter at the SWE/TBP Fall Career Fair at the EECS Building on September 23, 2013.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing

 

www.engin.umich.edu

Soonhyeong Choi, a graduate student in Electrical and Computer Engineering, working in Peter Gaskell’s ROB 550, Robotic Systems Laboratory in the Ford Robotics Building on the North Campus of the University of Michigan on Tuesday, February 1, 2022.

 

The course is a multidisciplinary laboratory course with exposures to sensing, reasoning, and acting for physically-embodied systems. Intro to kinematics, localization and mapping, planning, control, user interfaces. Design, build, integration, and test of mechanical, electrical, and software systems.

 

Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing

A team led by Duygu Kuzum's lab has developed a neuroinspired hardware-software co-design approach that could make neural network training more energy-efficient and faster. Their work could one day make it possible to train neural networks on low-power devices such as smartphones, laptops and embedded devices.

 

Full story: jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?id=2692

 

Photo credit: David Baillot/UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering

Shivam Patel, a masters student in computer engineering, hands part of the “train” that precedes the cubesat to Cole Dorman, a PhD student in climate and space sciences and engineering, as they launch one of four helium-filled balloons which carry the cubesats into the stratosphere as part of AEROSP 495 and 740 classes at the Plumb Lake County Park near Sturgis, Michigan on Tuesday morning, December 6, 2022.

 

The goal of the courses is to give students the opportunity to design and build complex satellite-like flight vehicles. The high-altitude balloons, which are filled with helium, rise into the stratosphere emulating some key aspects of spaceflight. According to Graduate Student Instructor Gage Bergman, "The stratosphere is an extreme environment, it experiences vast temperature differences, and also requires students to develop robust and reliable systems because once a balloon is released, there is no way to retrieve it - just like actual spaceflight.” Bergman is a masters student in aerospace engineering.

 

Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing

Photo by Martin Vloet, University of Michigan. Credit: Electrical & Computer Engineering at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Mayukh Nath, Computer Engineering Undergraduate Student inspects the upper unit on the Mi-TEE (Miniature Tether Electrodynamics Experiment) cubesat inside a CLaSP laboratory on North Campus in Ann Arbor, MI. before it launches into Earth's Ionosphere.

The space mission being planned by multiple student teams composed of undergraduate, Master’s, and doctoral students at the University of Michigan will test miniature electrodynamic tethers as a propulsion concept for small satellites.

The potential of the platform is tremendous: the low cost of launching satellites like picosats and femtosats into orbit due to their low mass and small size enables new paradigms for space missions using large numbers of spacecraft. Coordinated fleets of these satellites could provide the ability to perform simultaneous, multi-point sensing and rapid re-measurement of a single location.

Photo by Robert Coelius/ Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing

Researchers at UC San Diego and San Diego Zoo Global have joined forces to save the critically endangered northern white rhino from extinction. They are developing flexible robotic catheters that could aid in artificial insemination and embryo transfer on rhinos.

 

Full story: jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?id=2772

 

Photos by: David Baillot/UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering

Testing the power of the M3. Credit: Electrical & Computer Engineering at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Joshua Nye, left, and Miles Hanbury, both computer engineering undergraduate students, work together in one of the EECS labs on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Wednesday, September 28, 2022.

 

Their current project is to design as “smart” aquarium, one that will allow a pet owner to have video streamed to their wearable device, as well as to automatically feed the fish when traveling. This is their project for the EECS 373 Expo scheduled for early December.

 

Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing

Outstanding Electrical and Computer Engineering Student Joseph Adams is pictured with Dean Christopher B. Roberts.

Researchers at UC San Diego and San Diego Zoo Global have joined forces to save the critically endangered northern white rhino from extinction. They are developing flexible robotic catheters that could aid in artificial insemination and embryo transfer on rhinos.

 

Full story: jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?id=2772

 

Photos by: David Baillot/UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering

Matthew Mckay, Professor, Department of Electronic and Computer Engineering, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong SAR, China speaking during the Session “Engineering Solutions for Public Health with Hong Kong University of Science and Technology” at the Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Tianjin, People's Republic of China 2018. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Faruk Pinjo

Here be Computer Science and Medical Physics.

More portable, fully wireless smart home setups. Lower power wearables. Batteryless smart devices. These could all be made possible thanks to a new ultra-low power Wi-Fi radio developed by UC San Diego engineers. It enables Wi-Fi communication at 5,000 times less power than commercial Wi-Fi radios.

 

Full story: jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?id=2977

 

Photos by: David Baillot/UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering

Researchers at UC San Diego and San Diego Zoo Global have joined forces to save the critically endangered northern white rhino from extinction. They are developing flexible robotic catheters that could aid in artificial insemination and embryo transfer on rhinos.

 

Full story: jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?id=2772

 

Photos by: David Baillot/UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering

Soonhyeong Choi, a graduate student in Electrical and Computer Engineering, working in Peter Gaskell’s ROB 550, Robotic Systems Laboratory in the Ford Robotics Building on the North Campus of the University of Michigan on Tuesday, February 1, 2022.

 

The course is a multidisciplinary laboratory course with exposures to sensing, reasoning, and acting for physically-embodied systems. Intro to kinematics, localization and mapping, planning, control, user interfaces. Design, build, integration, and test of mechanical, electrical, and software systems.

 

Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing

Credit: Electrical & Computer Engineering at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Credit: Electrical & Computer Engineering at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Researchers at UC San Diego and San Diego Zoo Global have joined forces to save the critically endangered northern white rhino from extinction. They are developing flexible robotic catheters that could aid in artificial insemination and embryo transfer on rhinos.

 

Full story: jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?id=2772

 

Photos by: David Baillot/UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering

Researchers at UC San Diego and San Diego Zoo Global have joined forces to save the critically endangered northern white rhino from extinction. They are developing flexible robotic catheters that could aid in artificial insemination and embryo transfer on rhinos.

 

Full story: jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?id=2772

 

Photos by: David Baillot/UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering

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