Please note different time and location.

Monday
April 5
1:00 - 1:50 PM
Kearney (formerly Apperson) 305 
[map]<http://oregonstate.edu/cw_tools/campusmap/>

Boris Murmann
Assistant Professor
Department of Electrical Engineering
Stanford University

Digitizing the Analog World: Challenges and Oportunities
In most modern electronic systems, information is processed and stored in 
digital format. However, analog interfaces are still necessary to interface 
with "real world" signals and often present a bottleneck in the overall system. 
This presentation will provide an overview of recent advances in the design of 
analog-digital interface circuits from an application standpoint. It will 
include examples from the areas of data communication, micro-electromechanical 
systems (MEMS), bio-medical instrumentation, structural health monitoring, and 
large-area electronics.
Biography

Boris Murmann is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Electrical 
Engineering, Stanford, CA. He received the Ph.D. degree in electrical 
engineering from the University of California at Berkeley in 2003. His research 
interests are in the area of mixed-signal integrated circuit design, with 
special emphasis on data converters and sensor interfaces. In 2008, Dr. Murmann 
was a co-recipient of the the Best Student Paper Award at the VLSI Circuit 
Symposium and the recipient of the Best Invited Paper Award at the Custom 
Integrated Circuits Conference (CICC). In 2009, he received Agilent Early 
Career Professor Award.

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