SOE National Engineers Week

 

EWeek 2023 is Happening!

First celebrated in 1951, National Engineers Week is dedicated to ensuring a diverse and well-educated future engineering workforce by increasing understanding of and interest in engineering and technology careers. At Rutgers, EWeek is a chance to showcase what makes the School of Engineering great and to celebrate our community with fun events and some friendly competition.

Shirin Jalali is NSF CAREER Award Recipient

Five-year grant supports development of a theoretical platform for designing snapshot compressive imaging systems 

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) assistant professor Sirin Jalal has been awarded a $554,656 National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER award to provide a theoretical framework  to design, analyze, and optimize snapshot compressive imaging systems (SCI). 

The highly competitive and respected NSF CAREER grant funds research and educational initiatives of faculty at the beginning of their careers. Jalali who earned her doctoral degree in electrical engineering from Stanford University, joined the ECE faculty in January 2022.   

“Shirin’s NSF CAREER award enhances the growing reputation and visibility of the School of Engineering’s ECE department by supporting her leading-edge research and training of students on the critical area of theoretical foundations for SCI,” says ECE professor and department chair Yingying Chen. 

Enabling Effective 3D Imaging 

The ability to capture high-resolution 3D data cubes, such as video files or hyperspectral images (HIS), is essential for many medical and robotic applications. SCI can solve the process’s time-consuming, costly, and ineffective issues by enabling efficient 3D imaging.  

Jalali says the award is especially exciting because “SCI systems can potentially speed up a wide range of imaging applications, such as hyperspectral imaging and optical coherence tomography, which are used to diagnose certain diseases. Improving the speed of these imaging systems can make them accessible to everyone and create new opportunities for applications in everything from medical diagnosis and robotics to agriculture.”   

According to Jalali, the new project interfaces with her recent research focus on analyzing and developing theoretically founded solutions for inverse problems observed in various computational imaging systems. She will draw on the tools and techniques she’s developed while working on aspects of several other inverse problems. 

“I am hopeful that the results of my NSF CAREER project will lead to a generic theoretically founded framework that enables researchers on the one hand to design efficient recovery solutions for various SCI systems and on the other hand to optimize different aspects of their hardware systems,” she says. 

Funding for Student Recruitment 

NSF CAREER grants include an educational component. Jalali’s award will fund her recruitment and training of PhD students on the theoretical foundations of imaging sciences.  

“I hope that research on this project enables graduate students to design next-generation imaging solutions,” she says. “Students will be involved in different aspects of the project --- from addressing fundamental theoretical questions about these systems to designing and implementing efficient state-of-the-art algorithms.” 

https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=2237538&HistoricalAwards=false
 

Rutgers Day 2023

SAVE THE DATE 

Rutgers Day 2023 will take place on Saturday, April 29, 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. on the Busch Campus in Piscataway and the College Avenue and Cook/Douglass campuses in New Brunswick. Get ready for the ultimate celebration of everything Rutgers!

Come to the Busch "Science Campus" and see all the marvels of being an Engineer!

Look for the ECE tent near the Richard Weeks Hall of Engineering.

 

ECE faculty Bo Yuan received IEEE Technical Committee on Secure and Dependable Measurement (TCSDM) Early-Career Award

 
ECE Assistant Professor Bo Yuan is the recipient of IEEE Technical Committee on Secure and Dependable Measurement (TCSDM) Early-Career Award in 2022, "for contribution to develop fault-tolerant and efficient signal processing and machine learning techniques for reliable, secure and low-cost sensing and computing systems." The IEEE Technical Committee on Secure and Dependable Measurement aims at promoting interdisciplinary research and education in the field of secure and dependable measurement (SDM), which addresses security, dependability, reliability, fault tolerance, flexibility and extensibility of advanced measurement and sensing systems. IEEE TCSDM Early-Career Award recognizes a junior researcher from either academia or industry who has demonstrated outstanding contributions to the field of secure and dependable measurement and systems in the early stage of his/her career development. The award information can be found at: http://www.ieee-sdm.org/
 
Congratulations to Bo!
 

ECE Faculty Bo Yuan received NSF CAREER Award

ECE Assistant Professor Bo Yuan is the recipient of a new NSF CAREER award for the project titled "CAREER: SHF: Chimp: Algorithm-Hardware-Automation Co-Design Exploration of Real-Time Energy-Efficient Motion Planning." Dr. Bo Yuan is the PI on this five-year $500,000.00 project.
     
As the fundamental and critical robotic task for planning and deciding the actions of robots, motion planning is widely desired in many real-world applications, such as autonomous driving, in-warehouse package handling, assisted surgery etc. To date, there exists an increasing performance gap between the intensive computation of modern motion planning workloads and the insufficient support from general-purpose hardware, calling for efficient hardware acceleration to realize real-time energy-efficient high-quality planning. This project proposes Chimp, a cross-layer co-design framework for highly efficient motion planning processor. Chimp aims to develop a new design paradigm that can efficiently integrate domain expertise into learning-based motion planning, improving the planning reliability and performance. This project will significantly promote the intelligence and durability of modern autonomous systems, enhancing the economic opportunities in many fields such as autonomous driving, smart manufacturing, and intelligent healthcare.
 

More details on the project can be found on the NSF page here.

Congratulations to Bo!

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