New
MIT Faculty Join RLE
Elfar Adalsteinsson and Vladimir
M. Stojanovic become RLE members
For Immediate Release
MONDAY, 1 September 2004
Contact: William Smith, Assistant
Director for Finance and Sponsor Relations
Phone: +1.617.253.5621
Email: whs@mit.edu
CAMBRIDGE, MA. 09.01.2004
The Research Laboratory
of Electronics (RLE) at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology (MIT) announces that two MIT faculty
have joined the Laboratory.
Professor Elfar
Adalsteinsson is Assistant Professor
of Health Sciences and Technology and Assistant Professor
of Electrical Engineering. Professor Adalsteinsson
conducts research on medical imaging with magnetic
resonance, focusing on optimal methods for acquisition,
reconstruction and processing of in vivo imaging
data. His interests include techniques for efficient
sampling and spatial encoding of spectroscopic magnetic
resonance data, whereby small signals, originating,
for example, specifically from neurons in the brain,
yield information not observed with conventional
structural imaging. Applications of these and related
methods include a study of the progression of Alzheimer’s
disease and characterization of Multiple Sclerosis.
Professor Adalsteinsson received a B.S. in 1989 from
the University of Iceland, Reykjavik, and the M.S.
and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering in 1991
and 1995, respectively, from Stanford University.
From 1995 until his arrival in RLE, Elfar was with
the Lucas Center at Stanford.
Professor Vladimir
M. Stojanovic is Assistant Professor
of Electrical Engineering. His research interests
include optimization of integrated circuits and systems
application of convex optimization to digital communications,
analog and VLSI circuits, modeling of noise and dynamics
in circuits and systems, communications and signal
processing architectures, high-speed electrical and
optical links, on-chip signalling, clock generation
and distribution and high-speed digital and mixed-signal
IC design. Professor Stojanovic received the Dipl.Ing.
from the University of Belgrade in 1998, the M.S.E.E.
and Ph.D. from Stanford University in 2000 and 2005
respectively. From 1999 to 2004, he was Principal
Engineer in the Logic Interface Division of Rambus,
Inc.
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