The
purpose of the Student Design Contest is to promote excellence
in the design of electronic systems by providing competition
between graduate and undergraduate students at universities
and colleges.
Don't
forget to check out the University Booth at DAC!
DESIGN
CONTEST WINNERS
OPERATIONAL
CATEGORY
1st Place $4,000
(session 44.5) A True Single-Phase 8-bit Adiabatic Multiplier
Suhwan Kim,Conrad H. Ziesler, Marios C. Papaefthymiou -
Univ. of Michigan
2nd Place $2,500
(session 9.1) Design of Half-Rate Clock and Data Recovery
Circuits for Optical Communication
Jafar Savoj, Behzad Razavi - Univ. of California, Los Angeles
2nd Place $2,500
Optimal Design of a Low Power, Low Noise 3.4 GHz CMOS
Downconverter
Peter J. Vancorenland, Geert Van der Plas, Michiel Steyaert,
Willy Sansen - Katholieke Univ., Leuven, Belgium
CONCEPTUAL
CATEGORY
1st Place $4,000, Best Paper $1,000
(session 50.2) Two-Dimensional Position Detection System
with MEMS Accelerometer for MOUSE Applications
Seungbae Lee, Gijoon Nam, Junseok Chae, Hanseup Kim, Alan
J. Drake - Univ. of Michigan
2nd Place $2,500
A Configurable, Algorithm-Specific Processor for Real-Time
Wavelet-Based Video
Li Ding, Yi Li, Richard B. Brown - Univ. of Michigan 3rd
Place $1,500
VLSI Implementation of Binaural Spatializer Using FIR
Head-Related Transfer Function (HRTF)
NamSung Kim, Jiyoun Kim, Mingyu Cho, TaeYoung Choi, Trevor
Mudge Univ. of Michigan
HONORABLE
MENTIONS $500
A 1.8 GHz CMOS Cellular Transceiver Front-End: From Integrated
Circuit to Integrated System Design
Michiel Steyaert, Bram De Muer, Johan Janssens, Marc Borremans
- Katholieke Univ., Leuven, Belgium
HiPAR-DSP 16: VLSI-Design of a Second Generation Programmable
Parallel Multimedia-DSP
Willm Hinrichs, Jens Peter Wittenburg, Hanno Lieske, Helge
Kloos, Lars Friebe, Peter Pirsch - Univ. of Hannover, Germany
The contest will allow entries of both
integrated circuits and electronic systems (board-level
design). It will have two categories: 'Conceptual'
and 'Operational.'
Operational designs
will have been implemented and tested. Proof of implementation
in the form of die- or board-photographs and measurement
data must be supplied.
Conceptual designs
need not have been implemented but must have been thoroughly
simulated and must include a test plan.