School of Engineering
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Christopher Wolters
Graduate Visiting Researcher Student, Electrical Engineering
BioChristopher Wolters is an M.Sc. candidate in Electrical and Computer Engineering at the Technical University of Munich (TUM). His research focuses on artificial intelligence, bio-inspired computing, and hardware-software co-design. He is currently a Visiting Student Researcher at Stanford University, where he works on AI computing architectures under the supervision of Prof. Subhasish Mitra and Prof. Ulf Schlichtmann.
Christopher has conducted research at the University of Tokyo on compute-in-memory architectures and at Duke University on neuromorphic hardware, and he completed academic training at ETH Zurich in Electrical and Computer Engineering. His accolades include the Max Weber Program scholarship by the German state, the Best Poster Award at MWSCAS 2023, and the NSF-CISE MWSCAS Student Award. -
H.-S. Philip Wong
Willard R. and Inez Kerr Bell Professor in the School of Engineering
BioH.-S. Philip Wong is the Willard R. and Inez Kerr Bell Professor in the School of Engineering at Stanford University. He joined Stanford University as Professor of Electrical Engineering in 2004. From 1988 to 2004, he was with the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center. From 2018 to 2020, he was on leave from Stanford and was the Vice President of Corporate Research at TSMC, the largest semiconductor foundry in the world, and since 2020 remains the Chief Scientist of TSMC in a consulting, advisory role.
He is a Fellow of the IEEE and received the IEEE Andrew S. Grove Award, the IEEE Technical Field Award to honor individuals for outstanding contributions to solid-state devices and technology, as well as the IEEE Electron Devices Society J.J. Ebers Award, the society’s highest honor to recognize outstanding technical contributions to the field of electron devices that have made a lasting impact.
He is the founding Faculty Co-Director of the Stanford SystemX Alliance – an industrial affiliate program focused on building systems and the faculty director of the Stanford Nanofabrication Facility – a shared facility for device fabrication on the Stanford campus that serves academic, industrial, and governmental researchers across the U.S. and around the globe, sponsored in part by the National Science Foundation. He is the Principal Investigator of the Microelectronics Commons California-Pacific-Northwest AI Hardware Hub, a consortium of over 40 companies and academic institutions funded by the CHIPS Act. He is a member of the US Department of Commerce Industrial Advisory Committee on microelectronics.