Hi welcome back after so many days. Just came back from a college visit, my undergraduate college National Institute of Technology Calicut and I am relieved from Internship at International Institute of Information Technology, Hyderabad, Robotics Research Center. And I am getting ready to join Boise State University, ECE department. I will be working under Dr. Elisa Barney Smith. Boise has 2 Neuromorphic groups Here After my search regarding Neuromorphic Engineering research groups at various universities I have found few more other than ETH-Zurich's group. Those are as below:
There is one stanford group called Brains in Silicon and Cornells group called Asynchronous VLSI and Architecture and there is one more group called Institute of Neuromorphic Engineering associated with Maryland, College Park i think. I found one more group from UCSD also. There is one group at The Computational Sensorimotor Systems Laboratory at UMD.
There is one more professor at RMIT, Australia working on memristor kind of technologies.Dr. Shanta Sriram.
There is one group at Singapore SINAPSE. There is an institute INCF also working in same.
There is one researcher at Princeton working on Neuromorphic Engineering. Princeton University.
One more researcher at University of Waterloo is also working on same. UWaterloo.
A Physicist at heidelberg is working on Brain inspired computing.
A professor at Dayton is also working on the topic.
Johns Hopkins's professor is also working on it.
Neural Engineering
Swedish institute is also working on mimicking a neuron.
Hongkong University of Technology professor also works in same area.
HKUT another prfessor also works for same.
A Professor in OSLO is also working the same.
A Professor from IMSE Serville is also working.
Professor in universit of western sydney.
Professor in University of Sydney.
Lab in University of Sydney in Neuromorphic Hearing devices.
MIT Professor Rahul Sarpeshkar also is working!!
WWU proff
UTK proff
Italiano proff
Rama Lab at Washington university in St.Louis.
I started doing Introduction to Analog Electronics and Digital IC Design Course from Dr. R. Jacob Baker's webiste, cmosedu.com. I am also doing Introduction to Linear Dynamical Systems by Stephen Boyd from Stanford and Computational Neurosciences by UWash on Coursera. This is hell lot but I should do them thoroughly to get the pace. Actually 3 of the courses above said are like I know stuff from them already.
There is one stanford group called Brains in Silicon and Cornells group called Asynchronous VLSI and Architecture and there is one more group called Institute of Neuromorphic Engineering associated with Maryland, College Park i think. I found one more group from UCSD also. There is one group at The Computational Sensorimotor Systems Laboratory at UMD.
There is one more professor at RMIT, Australia working on memristor kind of technologies.Dr. Shanta Sriram.
There is one group at Singapore SINAPSE. There is an institute INCF also working in same.
There is one researcher at Princeton working on Neuromorphic Engineering. Princeton University.
One more researcher at University of Waterloo is also working on same. UWaterloo.
A Physicist at heidelberg is working on Brain inspired computing.
A professor at Dayton is also working on the topic.
Johns Hopkins's professor is also working on it.
Neural Engineering
Swedish institute is also working on mimicking a neuron.
Hongkong University of Technology professor also works in same area.
HKUT another prfessor also works for same.
A Professor in OSLO is also working the same.
A Professor from IMSE Serville is also working.
Professor in universit of western sydney.
Professor in University of Sydney.
Lab in University of Sydney in Neuromorphic Hearing devices.
MIT Professor Rahul Sarpeshkar also is working!!
WWU proff
UTK proff
Italiano proff
Rama Lab at Washington university in St.Louis.
I started doing Introduction to Analog Electronics and Digital IC Design Course from Dr. R. Jacob Baker's webiste, cmosedu.com. I am also doing Introduction to Linear Dynamical Systems by Stephen Boyd from Stanford and Computational Neurosciences by UWash on Coursera. This is hell lot but I should do them thoroughly to get the pace. Actually 3 of the courses above said are like I know stuff from them already.
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