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Research Projects

The following list gives some examples of the various research projects that are currently underway in the department:

Boolean Satisfiability (SAT) Research Project
We are doing some very exciting research in SAT related areas. Our focus is mainly on EDA applications using SAT methods. However, the results are also applicable to other fields. This project is lead by Prof. Sharad Malik.

FAST Copper Project
We are pushing the next revolution in copper-based broadband access to provide order of magnitude improvement in DSL access speed and quality through innovations in both physical layer and network architecture. This project is directed by Professor Mung Chiang.

Lightwave Communication Lab
The Lightwave Communication Laboratory is under the direction of Prof. Paul Prucnal.

Macroelectronics Group
Macroelectronics are integrated circuits bigger than semiconductor wafers. Flat panel displays and medical X-ray sensors are macroelectronic products. Sensitive skin and e-textiles will serve as human/machine interfaces, and mechantronic materials will marry structural with electronic functions. Transcending the capabilities of wafer based integrated circuits, these applications will be flexible, shapeable, yet rugged. This research project is lead by Prof. Sigurd Wagner.

MESCAL Project
Mescal stands for "Modern Embedded Systems: Compilers, Architectures, and Languages." Our goal is to provide a programmer's model and software development environment that allows for efficient implementation of an interesting set of applications onto a family of fully-programmable architectures/microarchitectures. Mescal is a collaboration between members of UC Berkeley's CAD Group and Princeton's Mescal Group. The project us lead by Prof. Sharad Malik and Prof. David August (CS).

NanoStructures Laboratory
The main research projects in the NSL involve: Nanofabrication, Nanoelectronics, Nano-optoelectronics, Nanomagnetics, and  Applications of Nanostructures in other fields. The Princeton Nanostructures Laboratory operates under the direction of Prof. Stephen Y. Chou.

New Jersey Center for Pervasive Information Technology (NJPIT)
NJPIT's mission is to develop and evaluate new technology for all sorts of pervasive information systems, ranging from handheld cellphones and PDAs to smart rooms and intelligent information servers. NJPIT is a joint effort of Princeton EE, Princeton CS, NJIT, and Rutgers. This project is directed by Prof. Wayne Wolf and includes Prof. Bede Liu and Prof. Vince Poor.

Nonlinear Optimization of Communication Systems (NOCS) Project

We are developing a mathematical framework of advanced optimization methods and distributed algorithms for both rigorous analysis and systematic design of communication systems across the layers. This project is directed by Professor Mung Chiang.

PARAPET Research Group
PARAPET stands for Princeton Architecture for Real-Power Techniques. The main topics of our work are: Power-Efficient Architectures - Organization and modeling techniques; Compile-time analysis of memory referencing behavior; and applications and tools for configurable computing. The PARAPET research group is lead by Prof. Margaret Martonosi.

Princeton Architecture Laboratory for Multimedia and Security (PALMS)
The PALMS project involves the study of the new computing platforms for the Information Age, targeted at emerging information processing paradigms. Our research focus is on the development of computer architectures with integrated optimizations for multimedia information processing and secure information processing. We are pursuing an integrated architecture for accelerated processing of all multimedia data types, including images, video, graphics, animation, voice, telephony, music, and text. This project is lead by Professor Ruby Lee.

Optoelectronic Components and Materials Group
This laboratory is engaged in investigating a variety of phenomena and devices related to electronic materials and optics. The laboratory is under the direction of Prof. Stephen R. Forrest, James S. McDonnell Distinguished Professor of Electrical Engineering.

ZebraNet Project.
The Zebra Net project is an inter-disciplinary effort to build sensor networks for wildlife tracking based on ad hoc sensor networks with low-power GPS-enabled tracking nodes. Led by Prof. Margaret Martonosi, the ZebraNet project represents a collaboration of faculty in low-power systems, wireless communication, mobile networking, and wildlife biology.

Other Faculty Research Groups:

Prof. Antoine Kahn's Group

Prof. Mansour Shayegan's Group

Prof. James Sturm's Group


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