Jan 18, 2024
PSyLab has openings for a Post-Doc and a graduate student to join us in 2023. We are also on the look-out for 2 M.S students and 2 B.S student researchers. More details can be found here.
by Sarah Miller
Jan 18, 2024
PSyLab has openings for a Post-Doc and a graduate student to join us in 2023. We are also on the look-out for 2 M.S students and 2 B.S student researchers. More details can be found here.
by Sarah Miller
Wenbing received the B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering from University of Washington, Seattle, WA in 2017 and is currently pursuing an M.S. degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering, with a focus on digital VLSI design. His interests and research experience lies in digital accelerator architecture, digital circuit design and layout methodology.
by Sarah Miller
Tyler received his B.S degree in Physics from the University of California, Santa Cruz in 2016. After working on the Silicon Strip Detector upgrade project for the Large Hadron Collider’s ATLAS detector, he decided to pursue his M.S. Degree in Electrical Engineering at the University of Washington starting in 2017. His current research at PSyLab is in the development of a side-channel-attack proof cryptography accelerator, and his current interests are in cryptography and Machine Learning. Tyler enjoys hiking, running, cooking, and coding in his free time.
by Sarah Miller
Akshat received his B.Tech in Electronics and Communication Engineering from VIT University. He is currently pursuing the MS degree in the Electrical and Computer Engineering department at the University of Washington. His interests are in the area of mixed-signal design and physical design.
by Sarah Miller
Sung joined PsyLab in 2015, after receiving the B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Washington. While at PSyLab he worked on leveraging ideas across computer architecture, VLSI, circuits, and algorithms to develop more capable and efficient hardware systems. He is currently pursuing a PhD in the area of computer architecture at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
by Sarah Miller
Naveen received his B.Tech in Electronics and Communication Engineering from National Institute of Technology Karnataka (NITK), Surathkal, India in 2016. He is currently a Masters student at University of Washington, Seattle with his research focusing on switched capacitor DC-DC converters. In 2015 he interned at Universität Paderborn, Paderborn, Germany and currently works part-time for Synopsys Inc. as an Analog and Mixed Signal Layout Design Engineer working on developing layout methodologies in advanced FinFET nodes (7nm and below).