NTU SOC VLSI-EDA

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UW-Madison VLSI-EDA LAB NTU SOC VLSI-EDA LAB

    Current Project:

       Wireless Interfacing Physiological Signal Measuring System Devices with Computers and Smart Phones

    ICS Group Information:

       Introduction

    Course Information:

       Computer Aided Analysis & Optimization of Integrated Circuit

      Integrated Circuit Design

      EDA Seminar(2006 Spring)



  •  (April 2006) EETIMES "Hope seen for taming IC process variability at next design node                                     Charlie Chen, professor of electrical and computer engineering at the NTU, University of Taiwan University and University of Wisconsin (Madison), proposed a quadratic way to model non-Gaussian parameters and a systematic way to analyze "confidence intervals" for the statistical distribution of parameters. A 97 percent confidence interval, for example, indicates a 97 percent probability that the "true mean" value will fall inside the distribution curve. A parameter may be non-Gaussian, but the mean estimation can be close to Gaussian.

  • (Sep. 2003) Micro-Electronics Magazine (新電子科技雜誌), Charlie Chung-Ping Chen ( 陳中平教授 ) "Soc設計探勘突破SoC電氣設計的挑戰與解決方針."

  • ACM/SIGDA ISPD 2003 Best Paper Award
    Ting-Yuan Wang, Yu-Min Lee, and Charlie Chung-Ping Chen
    for "3D Thermal-ADI -- An Efficient Chip-Level Transient Thermal Simulator"
     

  • ACM/SIGDA 2002 Outstanding New Faculty Award
    Charlie Chung-Ping Chen - University of Wisconsin- Madison
    For a junior faculty member early in his academic career who demonstrates outstanding potential as an educator and researcher in the field of electronic design automation.
     

  •  
    (June 3-7, 2002) "Sequence Design Inc.'s Dr. Li-Fu Chang and Dr. Keh-Jeng Chang presented findings on SoC inductance extraction with Professor Charlie Chung-Ping Chen of the University of Wisconsin at last week's FSA 2002 SoC Technical Workshop, describing how to achieve quality of results comparable with FastHenry analysis at speeds 100 times faster. FastHenry is an open-source field solver developed by researchers at MIT to calculate inductance values."
     

  •    
    (11/07/01) "A transmission-line modeling technique for approximating power grid losses across an IC was developed by UW-Madison VLSI-EDA group."

 

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