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Research Professor in the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, University of California, Santa Barbara, and Professor Emeritus in the Ming Hsieh Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Southern California, Los Angeles
Monday, Feb. 29, 2018
Abstract:
The field of digital signal processing (DSP) has been a very active area of research and application for more than six decades. This broad development has paralleled in time the rapid development of high-speed electronic digital computers, microelectronics and integrated circuit fabrication technologies. An ever-increasing assortment of integrated circuits specifically tailored to perform common DSP functions is available to the design engineer as system building blocks or parts-in-trade. DSP methodologies have been applied to consumer electronics, communications, automotive electronics, instrumentation, medical electronics, tomography and acoustic imaging, cartography, seismology, speech recognition, robotics and other fields. In his talk, Dr. Mitra will provide a brief overview of the initial developments in DSP and review some of the important advances made during the nearly-60-year period of its growth, and will describe a number of its key applications. He will conclude with speculation on DSP’s future trends and directions.
Dr. Sanjit K. Mitra is a Research Professor in the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, University of California, Santa Barbara. Dr. Mitra has published over 700 papers in the areas of analog and digital signal processing, and image and video processing. He has also authored and co-authored twelve books, and holds six patents. Dr. Mitra has served IEEE in various capacities including service as the President of the IEEE Circuits & Systems Society in 1986.
Dr. Mitra has received many awards including the 2009 Athanasios Papoulis Award of the European Association for Signal Processing, the 2005 SPIE Technology Achievement Award of the International Society for Optical Engineers; the University Medal of the Slovak Technical University, Bratislava, Slovakia in 2005; the 2006 IEEE James H. Mulligan, Jr. Education Medal; and the 2013 IEEE Gustav Robert Kirchhoff Award. He is the co-recipient of the 2000 Blumlein-Browne-Willans Premium of the Institution of Electrical Engineers (London). He has been awarded Honorary Doctorate degrees from the Tampere University of Technology, Finland, the Technical University of Bucharest, Romania, and the Technical University of Iasi, Romania.
He is a member of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering, a member of the Norwegian Academy of Technological Sciences, an Academician of the Academy of Finland, a foreign member of the Finnish Academy of Sciences and Arts, a foreign member of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, international member of the Croatian Academy of Engineering and the Academy of Engineering, Mexico, and a Foreign Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences, India and the Indian National Academy of Engineering. Dr. Mitra is a Life Fellow of the IEEE.
The new engineering building under construction by McLaughlin & Harvey and budgeted to cost £52m.
Designed by the Building Design Partnership (BDP) and Gardiner and Theobald LLP to include: a 120-person conference room; two 50-seat class rooms; a computer teaching laboratory and a Power Teaching Lab; and new offices for the School’s Engineering Teaching Organisation. It will be home to the Institute of Energy Systems which conducts research in low carbon energy systems, technology and policy. The building has a sustainable design and a rooftop photovoltaic array which will convert sunlight into renewable energy to power the building.
It is in the the southwest corner of the campus, next to the FloWave Ocean Energy Research Facility, the Scottish Microelectronics Centre and the Roger Land Building.
estates.ed.ac.uk/campus-development/kings-buildings/curre...
science-engineering.ed.ac.uk/news-events/current-year/new...
Premier Ford visited Toronto MicroElectronics in Mississauga.
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Le premier ministre Ford a visité l’entreprise Toronto MicroElectronics à Mississauga.
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The audience listens to Subhash Mahajan, University of California, Davis, present his talk at the Institute of Metals/Robert Franklin Mehl Award Lecture during TMS2015.
Sandia scientist Ashok Kodigala aligns a fiber to a chip-scale, heterogeneously integrated laser under a microscope at the MESA complex.
Learn more at: bit.ly/3RLv3ks
Photo by Craig Fritz
The new technology showcase on the Farnell stand promoted new products from a number of our suppliers including Freescale (Kinetis), Leopard Imagin (Aptina), Circuit Co (TI Beagleboard), Innovate Solutions (TI Hawkboard), ST (STM8 and STM32 discovery boards) and Wolfson Microelectronics
Governor Maura Healey, Lt. Governor Kim Driscoll and Secretary of Economic Development Yvonne Hao join Massachusetts Technology Collaborative Executive Director Carolyn Kirk and other officials to announce $9.2 million in new technology and workforce development grants aimed at spurring the microelectronics and semiconductor industry across the Northeast Region during a visit from officials and members from the U.S. Department of Defense at the NEXUS Center in Lincoln on Jan. 30, 2024. [Joshua Qualls/Governor’s Press Office]
SEMICON West is the flagship annual event for the global microelectronics industry and much more. Over the year's CaFCP and SEMICON have join together to conduct outreach on hydrogen and fuel cell vehicles to leaders of the Semiconductor industry. Attendees check out the materials that make up the hydrogen tank.
Peregrine Semiconductor Develops Next Generation of RF CMOS Semiconductor Process with IBM Microelectronics
This sound card uses the 24-bit 100dB signal-to-noise ratio Wolfson Microelectronics WM8775 analog-to-digital converter. You can see it near the top/center of the card, marked as "U8". I found a data sheet here www.wolfsonmicro.com/uploads/documents/en/WM8775.pdf. The card was nicely priced - around $30.