School of Engineering
Showing 421-440 of 798 Results
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Matthew McCready
Ph.D. Student in Electrical Engineering, admitted Autumn 2021
BioI am a 1st year PhD Student in Electrical Engineering at Stanford, with a M.Sc in Physics from The University of Western Ontario. I have over 4 years of research experience across various projects in medical and condensed matter physics. My interests focus on the design and development of tools that improve quality of life through the application of physics.
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Nick McKeown
Kleiner Perkins, Mayfield, Sequoia Capital Professor in the School of Engineering and Professor of Computer Science, Emeritus
BioMcKeown researches techniques to improve the Internet. Most of this work has focused on the architecture, design, analysis, and implementation of high-performance Internet switches and routers. More recently, his interests have broadened to include network architecture, backbone network design, congestion control; and how the Internet might be redesigned if we were to start with a clean slate.
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Yuchen Mei
Ph.D. Student in Electrical Engineering, admitted Autumn 2023
BioYuchen Mei is an EE Ph.D. student at Stanford University in Prof. Priyanka Raina's group. He received a B.S. degree in Electronic Information Science and Technology from Nanjing University (China) in 2021 and a M.S. degree in Electrical Engineering from Stanford in 2023. He is interested in digital VLSI design, domain-specific accelerators, and design automation.
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Teresa Meng
Reid Weaver Dennis Professor in Electrical Engineering and Professor of Computer Science, Emerita
BioTeresa H. Meng is the Reid Weaver Dennis Professor of Electrical Engineering, Emerita, at Stanford University. Her research activities in the first 10 years focused on low-power circuit and system design, video signal processing, and wireless communications. In 1998, Prof. Meng took leave from Stanford and founded Atheros Communications, Inc., which developed semiconductor system solutions for wireless network communications products. After returning to Stanford in 2000 to continue her teaching and research, Prof. Meng turned her research interest to applying signal processing and IC design to bio-medical engineering. She collaborated with Prof. Krishna Shenoy on neural signal processing and neural prosthetic systems. She also directed a research group exploring wireless power transfer and implantable bio-medical devices. Prof. Meng retired from Stanford in 2013.