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  • Continuous-Time Digital Filters and Other Mixed-Domain Processors\N

    Fri, Feb 11, 2005 @ 03:00 PM

    USC Viterbi School of Engineering

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    The main part of this talk by Yannis Tsividis of Columbi University considers the mixing of two domains usually kept
    separate: the digital domain, and the continuous time domain. When a
    continuous-time analog signal is to be processed using conventional DSPs, it
    is first sampled and quantized. This introduces aliasing of both the signal
    and the quantization distortion. He proposes to quantize, but not sample, the
    input signal, producing continuous-time binary signals which are processed
    directly using continuous-time digital hardware. This eliminates aliasing and
    results in much smaller in-band quantization error than is possible with
    conventional digital techniques. Preliminary experimental and simulation
    results support these claims. He then introduces other mixed-domain signal
    processors, including linear analog filters which use nonlinear signal
    decompositions and processors in which digital waveforms are processed
    directly with analog circuits. The emphasis of the talk is on principles, some
    of which may lead to practically important results whereas others may be
    interesting only from a conceptual viewpoint.Yannis Tsividis received the B.S. degree from the University of Minnesota,
    Minneapolis in 1972, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of
    California, Berkeley, in 1973 and 1976, respectively. Since 1976 he has been
    with the Department of Electrical Engineering, Columbia University, New York,
    where he currently holds the Charles Batchelor Memorial Chair. He has done
    extensive work in analog and mixed-signal MOS integrated circuits at the
    device, circuit, system, and computer simulation level, starting with the
    first fully-integrated MOS operational amplifier in 1975. A Fellow of the
    IEEE, Dr. Tsividis has received or co-received several research awards,
    including the 1984 Baker Prize Award for the best IEEE publication, the IEEE
    Circuits and Systems Society's Darlington (1987) and Guilllemin-Cauer (1998)
    Best Paper Awards, and the 2003 International Solid-State Circuits Conference
    L. Winner Outstanding Paper Award. He received Columbia's Presidential Award
    for Outstanding Teaching in 2003 and the IEEE Undergraduate Teaching Award in
    2005.
     
    Host:  Prof. John Choma

    Location: Ethel Percy Andrus Gerontology Center (GER) - ontology Auditorium.

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: Eric Mankin

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