MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

GUIDE TO GRADUATE STUDY IN AREA III:
ELECTRONICS, COMPUTERS, AND SYSTEMS

Spring, 2008

Area III Chair:
David J. Perreault

Table of Contents

Degree Programs

Academic Program

Other Professional Training

Qualification for Doctoral Study

Research Programs

Areas of Focus

Faculty and Staff and their Areas of Interest

Degree Programs

Programs for graduate students in electronics, computers, and systems lead to the degrees of Master of Science, Master of Engineering, Electrical Engineer, Doctor of Philosophy, and Doctor of Science. They emphasize both analysis and synthesis of devices and systems for measuring or processing signals, information, or power. Examples of research activities include processing of digital and analog signals representing audio, visual, or other information; analog and digital system design; computer architecture and software/hardware system design; design and analysis of VLSI systems; computer aided circuit design; circuit theory; electric and electronic power systems; and electronics for instrumentation and control.

The programs involve academic study, other professional training, and a thesis that serves as a professional apprenticeship in research and engineering; these components are described in more detail in the remainder of this memorandum.

Academic Program

Professional expertise requires a thorough understanding of fundamentals together with the more advanced technology unique to one’s area of specialization. The core Area III subjects are listed in the MIT Bulletin in the section Electronics, Computers, and Systems and are in the 6.3xx group. However, because of the broad area of coverage of Area III, at least half of the other Course 6 subjects are relevant graduate work in Area III.

Students in Area III are advised either to take the fundamental subjects relevant to their special interests, or have learned those fundamentals elsewhere. Note that two advanced undergraduate course can be applied toward an SM degree. In addition, it is generally recommended that one or more additional fundamental electives be taken because professional competence today requires considerable breadth. These courses might form part of a minor for a doctoral program. The recommended curriculum for students in Area III includes at least four courses from the 6.3xx group, including at least one graduate elective course from each of the following three groups: 1) signal processing, communications, and control, 2) devices, circuits, and digital design, and 3) the more specialized or applications courses.

Other Professional Training

In addition to regular academic subjects and thesis work, there are important additional ways to develop professionally. These include teaching and research assistantships, special seminars on current technical topics, and membership and participation in appropriate professional societies. In Area III, it is particularly important to become familiar with current literature because technology today is too diverse and advancing too rapidly for the more formal and academic subjects to keep pace. Seminars and professional journals are appropriate vehicles for developing and preserving such breadth.

Qualification for Doctoral Study

Since Fall, 1999, the department has instituted a new doctoral qualification procedure. It consistis of two parts, the TQE (technical qualification exam), and the RQE (research qualification exam). For details, please refer to the department memoranda (3805 and 3806) on the doctoral qualification procedure.

Research Programs

The laboratories at MIT that are mostly involved with research in Area III are the Research Laboratory of Electronics, the Microsystems Technology Laboratories, the Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems, and the Laboratory for Electromagnetic and Electronic Systems. Several other laboratories pursue selected programs in this area including the Center for Materials Science and Engineering, the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, and Lincoln Laboratory. Draper Laboratory, formerly part of MIT, also supports several research assistants. Annual Progress Reports of these laboratories are available in the MIT libraries and in the respective laboratory document rooms.

An overview of research in the EECS Department is provided by 6.961, Introduction to Electrical Engineering Research, which is offered each fall. Area III also conducts an Open House where representative research areas are discussed and laboratory tours are arranged.

Areas of Focus

There are five broad areas of focus within Area III:

A        Signal Processing, Communications, and Control

The subjects relevant to signal processing, communications and control include several which are basic to other areas as well as to Area III. Statistics, random signals, and noise are discussed in 6.432, and basic principles of linear system theory are developed in 6.241 and 6.242. Digital signal processing is presented in 6.341 together with some basic linear system theory. 6.343, 6.344 and 6.345 are more advanced subjects in signal processing. Graduate electives develop a variety of other concepts and technologies basic to the analysis and design of communications, control, and signal processing systems. Other more mathematical subjects are not listed here because they normally fall within the province of Area I.

B        Energy and Power Systems

Energy and power systems involve subjects that explore signal processing devices and techniques involving electromagnetic or mechanical waves, and therefore are often accompanied by an appropriate background course in electromagnetics. 6.334, and 6.685 cover topics in this subject area. Those interested in micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) may elect 6.777.

C        Circuits and Systems

Circuits and systems center on device-level circuit and system design, which are discussed in several undergraduate and graduate subjects. Graduate students may want to take undergraduate laboratory subjects 6.101, 6.111, or 6.115 The electives 6.301 and 6.302 have long provided valuable background for analog electronic circuits. In addition, they may consider graduate subjects such as 6.331, 6.334, 6.374, 6.376, 6.775, and 6.776.

D       Digital Design and Computer Architecture

Digital design and computer architecture courses include some useful subjects offered as undergraduate electives. 6.823 is a basic course in computer architecture but requires some computer science background. 6.374 is the advanced subject in VLSI and Integrated Circuit design. The thesis and other individual programs are also very important in developing expertise in this area; these opportunities are discussed later in this guide. Some students may find it beneficial to consider other subjects in this sequence, such as 6.004 (computer architecture) if this material is unfamiliar.

E       Computer-Aided Design and Numerical Methods

Computer-aided design and numerical method are covered in graduate-level courses such as 6.336J which introduces computational simulation and optimization, 6.337J for iterative and direct linear solution, FFT, and wavelets, and 6.338J for parallel computing.

Faculty and Staff and their Areas of Interest

Faculty and staff with research programs relevant to Area III are listed below. Many have their primary areas listed with another Area. Students are encouraged to contact these people directly to discuss research projects, research assistantships, and thesis work. The names are listed alphabetically together with one or more letters (A,B,C, D or E) indicating whether the research is primarily in the area of: “A” – signal processing, communications, and control; “B” – electromagnetic and acoustic signals and systems; “C” – devices, analog and device-level circuit design, or “D” – digital design and computer architecture, "E"- computer-aided design and numerical methods.

D

 

Agarwal, A.
Rm. 32-G782, 3-1448

Computer architecture, design of scalable multiprocessor systems, VLSI processors, compilation and runtime technologies for parallel processing, and performance evaluation.

A

 

Baggeroer, A.B.      
Rm. 5-206A, 3-4336

Sonar, seismic and underwater acoustics, signal processing for oceanographic data systems; space/time and distributed random processes; array processing; acoustic telemetry.

D

 

Brooks, R.A.      
Rm. 32-G430, 3-5223

Artificial intelligence, humanoid robots.

D,A

 

Burns, S.K.      
Rm. 20A-119, 3-2577

Medical instrumentation, microprocessor-based instrumentation and system development hardware and software, analog and digital signal processing, real-time computer networks, electrocardiography, sports medicine, telephony. Medical instruments in the developing world.

A,C,D

 

Chandrakasan, A.P.      
Rm. 38-107, 8-7619

Energy efficient implementation of digital integrated circuits for systems such as distributed wireless microsensors and portable multimedia devices, the development of protocols and algorithms for wireless communication, design methodologies for emerging technologies and collaborative design tools.

B,C

 

Cooke, C.M.      
Rm. N10-201, 3-2591

Electrostatic phenomena, properties and theories of dielectrics at high stresses. Generation and measurement of high voltages and electron X-ray beams. High resolution computerized tomography and acoustic wave imaging. Electronic instrumentation circuits. Sensors and monitoring systems.

C,E

 

Daniel, L.      
Rm. 36-849, 3-2631

Development of numerical techniques for simulation and modeling for high speed interconnect, electromagnetic interference, mixed-signal and analog RF circuits, MEM devices, and power electronics

A,C  

Dawson, J.
Rm. 39-527A, phone: 324-5281

Analog system theory and its applications; RF transceivers, power amplifier linearization, high speed data conversion, problems in nolinear control.

D,E

 

Devadas, S.      
Rm. 32-G844, 3-0454

Automation of hardware design, including techniques for architectural and logic synthesis. Validation of hardware and software systems. Intelligent environments for automated control and adaptive computing.

B

 

Gray, M.L.      
Rm. E25-519, 8-8974

Electrical, mechanical and chemical mediators of connective tissue growth and development. Ion partitioning and transport in biological tissues. NMR spectroscopy and imaging. Development of silicon micromachined tools for biological applications.

C

 

Gray, P.E.      
Rm. 38-344, 3-4665

Electronic circuits and devices.

A,B

 

Ilic, M.      
Rm. 10-059, 3-4682

Control of large scale nonlinear systems; applications to electric power systems; large scale nonlinear networks. Modeling of economic feedback in large scale network-based industries.

C

 

Kassakian, J.G.      
Rm. 10-172, 3-3448

Power electronics. Power supplies, dc/dc converters, inverters, controlled rectifiers and motor drives, power semiconductor devices. Product design and manufacturing. Automotive electronics and electrical systems.

B,C

 

Kirtley, J.L., Jr.      
Rm. 10-098, 3-2357

Modeling, analysis, design and fabrication of electromechanical devices and power systems. Rotating electric machines and power systems. Monitoring of equipment. Electric and hybrid vehicles.

D

 

Knight, T.F.      
Rm. 32-312, 3-7807

Computer architectures and programming languages for artificial intelligence applications, image and auditory perception. Physics of computation. High speed digital design.

A,B

 

Lang, J.H.      
Rm. 10-176, 3-4687

Analysis, design and control of physical systems. Emphasis on electromechanical systems. Applications include traditional electric machines, microsensors, microactuators and flexible structures. Digital control and manufacturing.

C

  Lee, H.-S.      Rm. 39-553A, 3-5174
Analog and mixed-signal integrated circuits in CMOS technologies. Subsystems and circuits including analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog converters, operational amplifiers, and signal processing circuits. Applications include communication systems, portable electronics, and multimedia.

B,C

 

Leeb, S.B.      
Rm. 10-169, 3-9360

Design, analysis, construction, control, and monitoring of servomechanical actuators and mechatronic systems. Applications of exotic materials including gel polymers to actuator construction.

C,D

 

Masaki, I.      
Rm. 38-107, 3-8532

VLSI architecture. Emphasis on interrelationship among applications, systems, algorithms, and chip architectures. Major application fields includes intelligent transportation systems, video, and multimedia.

C

 

Penfield, P.L., Jr.      
Rm. 38-344, 3-2506

Information and entropy.

C

 

Perreault, D.J.      
Rm. 10-039, 8-6038

Electronic circuit design, power electronics and energy conversion, control. Applications to industrial, commercial, scientific, transportation, and biomedical systems.

C

 

Perrott , M.H.      
Rm. 38-344B, 2-2889

High speed mixed-signal circuit design focused on optical networking, high speed backplane and RF applications. Specific areas of interest include frequency synthesizers, clock and data recovery circuits, high speed equalization techniques, and multi-level signaling techniques for high speed serial links.

C

 

Roberge, J.K.     
Rm. 38-483, 3-5994

Electronic circuit design, including space circuitry; design for integrated circuits; analog to digital conversion techniques, and other analog-digital circuits. Feedback systems.

B

 

Sarpeshkar, R.     
Rm. 38-294, 3-6599

Analog signal processing. Modeling and sysnthesis of biological system based circuits.

A,B      

 

Shapiro, J.H.     
Rm. 36-419, 3-4179

Quantum noise reduction theory and experiment. Coherent laser radar. Ultra-wideband fiber optic communications.

C

 

Sodini, C.G.      
Rm. 39-527A, 3-4938

Technology intensive integrated circuit and systems design; application toward sensory interface electronics emphasizing analog signal processing and RF communications.

B,A      

 

Staelin, D.H.      
Rm. 26-341, 3-3711

Microwave remote sensing from satellites; signal processing, compression, and estimation; neural networks; experiment design; data mining applications to manufacturing.

B,A      

 

Stevens, K.N.     
Rm. 36-517, 3-3209

Speech communication, including the acoustics of speech production, speech perception, speech physiology, communicative disorders and machines for recognition and generation of speech. Acoustics. Psychoacoustics.

C, D  

Stojanovic, V.M.
Rm. 38-260, 324-4913

Integrated circuits and systems. Modeling of noise abnd dynamics in circuits and systems. Application of convex optimization to digital communications, analog and VLSI circuits. Communicatiolns and signal processing architectures. High-speed electrical and optical links, on-chip networks and signalling, clock generation and distribution. High-speed digital and mixed-signal IC design.

B,C     

 

Terman, C.      
Rm. 32-G790, 8-8995

Computer and DSP architectures; VLSI circuits, design methodologies and CAD tool; circuit simulation; computer languages.

A      

 

Verghese, G.C.     
Rm. 10-093, 3-4612

Dynamic systems; switched/periodic systems. Computer aided fabrication of integrated circuits. Factory modeling and scheduling. Automated sampling microscope.

D,C      

 

White, J.K.      
Rm. 36-880, 3-2543

Theoretical and practical aspects of computer simulation and synthesis algorithms applied to problems in circuit, device, packaging, and micromechanical system design.

E,A      

 

Wyatt, J.L.      
Rm. 38-864, 3-6718

Implantable retinal prosthesis. Analog VLSI for machine vision. Dynamics of nonlinear circuits and systems.

A      

 

Zue, V.W.      
Rm. 32-G470, 3-8513

Computer speech recognition and understanding. Acoustic analysis of speech, lexical access, and natural language
processing for spoken input.

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