2016-2018 Undergraduate and Graduate Bulletin (with addenda) [ARCHIVED CATALOG]   
						Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
						
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Head: Ivan Selesnick 
Mission Statement
The department’s mission is to engage students who seek educational achievement as the nation enters a new age with new demands and opportunities. The goal is to provide students with a broad based education for electrical- and computer-engineering careers. NYU Tandon School of Engineering students gain the skills to become creative leaders in their professional careers with the passion and desire to discover, invent, innovate, apply and advance new science and technology to solve the world’s most critical problems. 
The Department
Electrical and computer engineers-whose technical skills have produced innovations in telephones, electric power systems, rapid transit, radio, television, medical electronics, computers, microelectronics, the Internet and wireless communications-have contributed more to the quality of 20th-century life than any other profession. Twenty-first century engineering innovation will be equally exciting. 
The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering is well respected worldwide for its major contributions to the profession and its tradition of teaching and research excellence. NYU Tandon electrical and computer engineering graduates are prominent in university faculties, industrial labs and company boardrooms, spanning the range of the electrical, electronic and information-technology industries. 
The department enters the 21st century with strong teaching and research programs in the most exciting digital-age fields: the Internet, wireless communications, computers, multimedia signal processing, robotics, automatic control and electric-power generation and distribution. 
In the intimate NYU Tandon environment, students benefit from frequent access to faculty members and laboratories at the forefront of innovation. In the spirit of entrepreneurship, NYU Tandon’s infrastructure encourages faculty and students to transfer their inventions to industry and to start their own companies. 
The department hosts the Center for Advanced Technology in Telecommunications (CATT), a New York State-sponsored research center, and NYU Wireless, the world’s first academic research center combining Wireless, Computing, and Medical applications. Together, these centers greatly strengthen the department in telecommunication networks and in wireless-communications research and education. 
Contact
NYU Tandon School of Engineering 
Five MetroTech Center 
Brooklyn, NY 11201 
Tel: (646) 997-3590 
Fax: (646) 997-3906 
Web: https://engineering.nyu.edu/ece/ 
The Profession
The rapidly growing profession of electrical engineering has evolved from its early beginnings in electric- power generation and distribution through the development of radio, television, control and materials to computers, telecommunications and health care. In the last century, electrical engineers have created advances in power distribution, computers and communications that have changed the world. Their inventions have made the world a smaller, safer place and allow for immediate reporting and images from distant places that make world events part of daily life. 
While electrical engineering undergraduate and graduate students concentrate on areas of electrical science, graduates apply their training to diversified fields such as electronic design, bioengineering, city planning, astronautics, radio astronomy, system engineering, image processing, telemetry, the Internet, computer design, management and patent law. As students mature and realize their abilities, they may choose professional lives in engineering, government, or education. 
The expertise of NYU Tandon’s electrical engineering faculty covers a wide range of fields. Principal areas of teaching and research are microelectronic devices and systems; computer engineering; telecommunication networks; signal, image, and video processing; microwave engineering; wireless communications; power systems and energy conversion; plasma science and engineering; systems and control engineering; robotics; and nano-electronics. 
Degrees Offered
The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering offers the following degree and certificate programs. Separate sections of this catalog present the objectives, requirements, advising resources and courses for individual programs. 
Bachelor of Science 
Master of Science 
Doctor of Philosophy 
Special Undergraduate Options
The BS/MS Option: This program is available to exceptional undergraduate students, enabling them to earn both a bachelor’s and a master’s degree. 
Possible BS/MS combinations include BS in Electrical or Computer Engineering with a MS in Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering or Computer Science. 
Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering (dual major), B.S. : A student can earn a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering by completing 141 credits. 
Minors: Electrical Engineering Minor  or Computer Engineering Minor . 
Student Organizations
NYU Tandon students may join student chapters of these professional organizations: the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and Eta Kappa Nu, the Electrical Engineering Honor Society. 
Speciality Labs
The department keeps pace with dynamic advances in electrical and computer engineering by maintaining state-of-the-art laboratories for instruction and experimentation. Laboratory courses combine lectures, experiments and project work. These courses also provide students with a rich set of elective choices, opportunities to work on senior projects with faculty researchers, valuable hands-on experience to enhance and supplement material taught in lecture classes, and forums to practice their oral and written communication skills. 
The Wireless Lab provides formal experiments, lectures and project work on state-of-the-art, commercial spread-spectrum wireless access systems, including bit-error rate analysis and UHF channel propagation measurements. 
The Multimedia Lab offers students hands-on experience to acquire, process and transmit voice, audio, image and video signals to create multimedia documents and to configure networked multimedia applications. 
The Local Area Networks Lab includes a set of weekly experiments using Linux-based terminals, Ethernet LANs, routers and bridges and associated software with which to conduct a variety of LAN/WAN experiments and projects. 
The High-Speed Networking Lab, equipped with various equipment and tools, allows faculty and students to build hardware prototypes (VLSI/FPGA chips and PCB) and software test bed to demonstrate their research concepts in high-performance routers, network security and network on chip. 
The VLSI Design Lab treats Very Large-Scale Integrated-circuit design, performance analysis and circuit characterization, using industry-standard VLSI CAD tools and hardware-description languages such as VHDL. Students study the design of CMOS logic, standard cells, gate arrays and mixed-signal (analog/digital) circuits. 
The Electric Power Laboratory fosters education and research for undergraduate and graduate studies. Equipment includes modern data-acquisition equipment, smart-power supplies and loads, digital meters, high-performance computing facility for data-driven and computationally-intensive tasks, power transformers and classical rotating machine pairs for dynamic testing and loading. In addition, static converters are available for experiments on Smart Grid and Distributed Resources, such as solar and fuel cells, energy storage, demand-side management, wind power and variable-speed drives. 
The Control/Robotics Lab provides a variety of experiments and project work focusing on feedback control, data acquisition and computer control. 
The Microwave Lab treats the design, fabrication and testing of passive and active circuits and antennas using modern CAD and measurement software and hardware. 
Center for Advanced Technology in Telecommunications
Through the New York State Center for Advanced Technology in Telecommunications (CATT), electrical and computer engineering faculty collaborate with industry in research, education and technology transfer in telecommunications and information systems. CATT is distinguished for its innovations in many fast-moving areas, including broadband networks, peer-to-peer networking, switch design and implementation, security hardware, ad-hoc wireless networks, cellular networks, wireless local area networks, software design and reliability, search engine technology, network design tools, traffic planning and capacity engineering, image and video coding and transport. 
NYU Wireless
NYU WIRELESS is a multi-disciplinary academic research center that offers an unprecedented and unique set of skills. 
Centered at New York University’s Brooklyn engineering location and involving faculty and students throughout the entire NYU community, NYU WIRELESS offers its industrial-affiliate sponsors, faculty members, and students a world-class research environment that is creating the fundamental theories and techniques for next-generation mass-deployable wireless devices across a wide range of applications and markets. 
This center combines NYU Tandon’s School of Engineering program with NYU’s School of Medicine and the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, and offers a depth of expertise with unparalleled capabilities for the creation of new wireless net. 
Faculty
Professors
H. Jonathan Chao, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, The Ohio State University 
Network security, high-performance routers, network on chip 
Dariusz Czarkowski, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, University of Florida 
Power electronics and systems, electric drives 
Elza Erkip, Institute Professor and Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Stanford University 
Wireless communication, communication theory, information theory 
Zhong-Ping Jiang, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, École des Mines de Paris (France) 
Control systems, complex networks 
Ramesh Karri, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, University of California, San Diego 
VLSI, CAD, computer engineering 
Farshad Khorrami, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, The Ohio State University 
Robotics, control systems 
Jelena Kovačević, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Dean of NYU Tandon School of Engineering 
PhD, Columbia University 
Signal processing, biomedical image analysis 
Spencer P. Kuo, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn Plasmas and electromagnetics 
Yong Liu, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 
Communication networks 
I-Tai Lu, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn 
Electromagnetics, acoustics, wireless communication 
Shivendra S. Panwar, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Director of the New York State Center for Advanced Technology in Telecommunications 
PhD, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 
Communication networks 
S. Unnikrishna Pillai, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, University of Pennsylvania 
Signal processing and communications 
Sundeep Rangan, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, University of California, Berkeley 
Wireless communication, signal processing and estimation, information theory 
Theodore Rappaport, David Lee/Ernst Weber Professor of Electrical Engineering 
PhD, Purdue University 
Wireless communications 
Ivan Selesnick, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Rice University 
Signal processing 
Yao Wang, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, University of California, Santa Barbara 
Image and video processing, computer vision, medical imaging 
Zivan Zabar, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
Sc.D., Technion - Israel Institute of Technology 
Electric power systems, electric drives, power electronics 
Associate Professors
Nirod K. Das, Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, University of Massachusetts 
Electromagnetics, antennas, microwave integrated circuits 
Francisco de Leon, Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, University of Toronto (Canada) 
Power-system analysis, distributed generation systems, smart grid 
Ludovic Righetti, Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (Switzerland)  
Robotics 
Peter Voltz, Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering; Associate Dean for Undergraduate and Graduate Academics 
PhD, Polytechnic Institute of New York 
Communications and signal processing 
Assistant Professors
Anna Choromanska, Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Columbia University 
Machine learning 
Yury Dvorkin, Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, University of Washington 
Smart grids  
Siddharth Garg, Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Carnegie Mellon University 
Computer engineering 
Giuseppe Loianno, Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, University of Naples Federico II 
Robotics 
Shaloo Rakheja, Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Georgia Institute of Technology 
Nanoscale electronics 
Davood Shahrjerdi, Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, University of Texas at Austin 
Electronic materials, device structures and circuits 
Quanyan Zhu, Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Mathematics 
PhD, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 
Game theory and applications, optimization 
Associated and Affiliated Faculty
Steve Arnold, University and Thomas Potts Professor of Physics (Joint appointment with Department of Applied Physics) 
PhD, City University of New York 
Microparticle photophysics, photonic atom biosensors 
Juan Bello, Associate Professor of Music Technology and Computer Science & Engineering at New York University 
PhD, Queen Mary University of London (UK) 
Machine listening, music informatics 
Leslie Greengard, Silver Professor of Mathematics and Computer Science 
PhD, Yale University 
Scientific computing, fast algorithms 
Yann LeCun, Silver Professor of Computer Science, Neural Science, and Electrical and Computer Engineering, 
PhD, Université Pierre et Marie Curie (France) 
Machine learning, computer vision 
Joel S. Schuman, Professor, Ophthalmology; Professor, Neuroscience and Physiology; Professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering 
MD, Mount Sinai School of Medicine 
Ophthalmology, optical coherence tomographyDaniel Sodickson, Professor, Radiology; Professor, Neuroscience and Physiology; Professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 
Biomedical imaging, magnetic resonance imaging 
Research Faculty
David Chudnovsky, Distinguished Research Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Ukrainian Academy of Sciences 
VLSI, computer engineering, field theory, number theory 
Gregory Chudnovsky, Distinguished Research Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Ukrainian Academy of Sciences 
VLSI, computer engineering, field theory, number theory 
Thanasis Korakis, Research Assistant Professor 
PhD, University of Thessaly (Greece) 
Wireless networks 
Pei Liu, Research Assistant Professor 
PhD, Polytechnic University 
Wireless Communications and Networks 
Yang Xu, Research Assistant Professor 
PhD, Tsinghua University (China) 
High-speed networking 
Industry Faculty
Matthew Campisi, Industry Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
MS, Polytechnic University 
Signal processing, medical imaging 
Michael Knox, Industry Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Polytechnic University 
Wireless communications, RF and microwave components, analog-circuit design 
Thomas Marzetta, Distinguished Industry Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 
Wireless communication 
Adjunct Faculty
Zdzislaw Bochynski, Adjunct Lecturer 
MS, Warsaw University of Technology 
John Carter, Adjunct Lecturer 
PhD, New York University 
Xiao-Kang Chen, Adjunct Lecturer 
PhD, Polytechnic University 
Robert DiFazio, Adjunct Lecturer 
PhD, Polytechnic University 
Fraida Fund, Adjunct Lecturer 
PhD, New York University 
Nina Krikorian, Adjunct Lecturer 
MS, New York University 
Prashanth Krishnamurthy, Adjunct Lecturer 
PhD, Polytechnic University 
Jonathan Mamou, Adjunct Lecturer 
Phd, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 
Richard Stern, Adjunct Lecturer 
MS, Polytechnic University 
David Wang, Adjunct Lecturer 
PhD, Polytechnic University 
Zhengxue Zhao, Adjunct Lecturer 
PhD, Polytechnic University 
Presidential Fellows
David J. Goodman, NYU School of Engineering Presidential Fellow 
PhD, Imperial College, University of London (England) 
Dante C. Youla, NYU School of Engineering Presidential Fellow 
MS, New York University 
Faculty Emeriti
Henry L. Bertoni, Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering 
PhD, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn 
Leo Birenbaum, Associate Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering and Electrophysics 
MS, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn 
Joseph J. Bongiorno, Jr., Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering 
DEE, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn 
Robert Boorstyn, Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering 
PhD, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn 
Frank A. Cassara, Professor Emeritus of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Polytechnic University 
David Chang, Professor Emeritus of Electrical and Computer Engineering 
PhD, Harvard University 
Douglas A. Davids, Associate Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering 
PhD, Johns Hopkins University 
Istvan Palocz, Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering and Electrophysics 
PhD, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn 
Philip E. Sarachik, Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering 
PhD, Columbia University 
Harry Schachter, Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering 
PhD, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn 
Benjamin Senitzky, Professor Emeritus of Electrophysics 
PhD, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn 
Sidney S. Shamis, Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering 
MS, Stevens Institute of Technology 
Theodore Tamir, University Professor Emeritus 
PhD, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn 
Wen-Chung Wang, Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering and Electrophysics 
PhD, Northwestern University 
				  
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