State Key Laboratory of Analog and Mixed-Signal VLSI: IEEE CAS Distinguished Lecture by Prof. Weisi Lin
The University Lecture on “Perception-driven Visual Signal Modeling, Evaluation and Processing” will ta ...
The University Lecture on “Perception-driven Visual Signal Modeling, Evaluation and Processing” will ta ...
The University Lecture on “Ultra-Low Power and Ultra-Low Voltage Wireless Transceivers for loT” will ta ...
The two state key laboratories at the University of Macau (UM), namely the State Key Laboratory of Analog and Mixed-Signal VLSI (AMS-VLSI Lab) and the State Key Laboratory of Quality Research in Chinese Medicine (QRCM Lab), today (6 July) passed their second assessments after 6 years of operation conducted by experts in the fields of Chinese medical sciences and integrated circuits.
Dr Lei Ka Meng, who was born and raised in Macao, obtained a bachelor’s degree in electrical and electronics engineering and a PhD degree in electrical and computer engineering from the University of Macau (UM).
Assistant Professor Lu Yan from the University of Macau (UM) State Key Laboratory of Analog and Mixed-Signal VLSI (AMSV) received the 2017 Outstanding Young Author Award from the Circuits and Systems (CAS) Society of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
A delegation from the International Technical Program Committee (ITPC) of the IEEE International Solid-State Circuit Conference (ISSCC, also known as the ‘Chip Olympics’) 2018, successfully organised an ISSCC promotional activity in Wuhan Optical Valley and Nanjing Wireless Valley, with over 100 attendees from both academia and industry.
The University Workshop on “Emerging Data Conversion Architectures” will take place as follows: Date: 2 ...
The University Workshop on “Analog Layout Techniques” will take place as follows: Date: 15 Mar&nbs ...
A paper by UM scholars was recently published in Lab on a Chip, a publication under the Royal Society of Chemistry in the United Kingdom. The paper proposes a new technique that can quickly identify the DNA of multiple potential pathogens causing septicemia from a single droplet (1uL).
Dr Lei Ka Meng from the University of Macau (UM) State Key Laboratory of Analog and Mixed-Signal VLSI and Faculty of Science and Technology, who is also a Macao Fellow, received the Young Researcher Award from the International Institute of Macau, for his research project, ‘Miniaturized Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Platforms for Chemical/Biological Assays with Customized CMOS Integrated Circuits’.