News

August 11, 2022
New study shows COVID-19 genomic recombination is uncommon but disproportionately occurs in spike protein region
An analysis of millions of SARS-CoV-2 genomes finds that recombination of the virus is uncommon, but when it occurs, it is most often in the spike protein region, the area which allows the virus to attach to and infect host cells. The Nature study was conducted by engineers at UC Santa Cruz and UC San Diego. Full Story

June 22, 2022Students earn top marks in Mars rover competition
The UC San Diego Yonder Dynamics student team made a triumphant return to the first in-person University Rover Challenge since 2019, claiming 1st place in the science portion of the Mars rover robotics competition, and 8th place overall out of 26 teams from around the world. Full Story

Press Clip: Oct 22, 2021
Prof. Shadi Dayeh of ECE at UC San Diego leads a $12.25 million grant to improve epilepsy treatment

Press Clip: Jul 15, 2020
Researchers Awarded NSF Grant to Apply Epidemic Model to COVID-19
Seminars
Testing High-Dimensional Distributions: Subcube Conditioning, Random Restrictions, and Mean Testing
Clément Canonne - IBM Research, Almaden
Given a distribution p on {-1,1}^d, we want to test whether p is uniform.
Self-Programming Networks: Applications to Financial Trading Systems
Balaji Prabhakar, Stanford University
We describe Self-Programming Networks (SPNs), an ongoing research effort at Stanford for making data center networks autonomous; that is, to enable networks to sense and
Towards a Theory of Information for Dynamical Systems
Victoria Kostina, Caltech
We are moving towards a massively and diversely connected world populated by a seamless network of intelligent, dynamic distributed systems engaged in a shared interaction with the physical world a
A Leap in Time: Learning and Reasoning with Videos
Xiaolong Wang
The field of computer vision has been completely transformed by the success of deep Convolutional Neural Networks (ConvNets).
The Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) department traces its roots back to the establishment of the Applied Electrophysics department in 1965, under its founding chair Henry Booker. Through a succession of department realignments emerged today’s ECE in 1987, when the then-combined Electrical Engineering and Computer Science department was split into two departments. Since then, ECE has earned a world-class reputation for producing top-notch engineers for industry and academia.
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ECE Brochure
The Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) Department at the Jacobs School of Engineering traces its history back to 1965, with the creation of the department of Applied Electrophysics, which became Applied Physics & Information Science, then Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and finally ECE as we know it today. Throughout those formative years, our vision focused on information and communication theory and systems, radio physics, and quantum electronics.
ECE is among the leading departments of its kind in the nation, built on fundamentals of applied mathematics and engineering physics, providing multidisciplinary, systems-oriented education and research in eleven core areas: Applied Ocean Sciences, Computer Engineering, Communication Theory & Systems, Electronic Circuits & Systems, Electronic Devices & Materials, Intelligent Systems, Robotics & Control, Medical Devices & Systems, Nanoscale Devices & Systems, Photonics, Radio and Space Science, and Signal & Image Processing.