In the Media
Sep 21, 2017
Festival of Genomics highlights research from the Slavov Laboratory
Festival of Genomics interviewed BioE Assistant Professor Nikolai Slavov to find out about the origins and the future of a new method for quantifying thousands of proteins in single human cancer […]
Sep 18, 2017
Darpa's new infrared sensor needs almost no power to function
ECE Associate Professor Matteo Rinaldi was featured in the International Business Times article "Darpa's new infrared sensor needs almost no power to function"
Sep 12, 2017
This tiny sensor could sleep for years between detection events
ECE Associate Professor Matteo Rinaldi's research was featured in the TechCrunch's article "This tiny sensor could sleep for years between detection events". See Related article: Sensing Without Consuming Power: Groundbreaking […]
Sep 11, 2017
Dormant, Yet Always-Alert Sensor Awakes Only in the Presence of a Signal of Interest
ECE Associate Professor Matteo Rinaldi’s research was featured in DARPA’s article on “Dormant, Yet Always-Alert Sensor Awakes Only in the Presence of a Signal of Interest” and Digital Trends “DARPA’s new smart sensor is powered by the infrared it’s designed to detect”
Sep 03, 2017
Confronting weather extremes
CEE Professor Auroop Ganguly’s op-ed article on “Confronting weather extremes” was featured in the Millennium Post.
Aug 24, 2017
Engineers just created a tiny antenna, which could be used for brain implants
ECE Professor Nian Sun's research featured in Digital Trend's Engineers just created a tiny antenna, which could be used for brain implants. See Related Article: Reducing the Size of Antennas
Aug 23, 2017
Ultra-small antennas point way to miniature brain implants
ECE Professor Nian Sun's research featured in Nature's Ultra-small antennas point way to miniature brain implants. See Related Article: Reducing the Size of Antennas
Aug 23, 2017
Mini-antennas could power brain-computer interfaces
ECE Professor Nian Sun's research featured in Science Magazine's Mini-antennas could power brain-computer interfaces, medical devices and highlighted in ASEE's First Bell. See Related Article: Reducing the Size of Antennas