Bruce Wooley was elected Society President for 2000-2001 and Charles Sodini was elected Society Vice President for 2000-2001. The President and Vice President are elected at the last AdCom meeting of odd-numbered year. Wooley's and Sodini's terms begin on January 1 and last for two years.
Wooley just completed two years as Vice President of the Society 1998-1999. Sodini has been Meeting Chair for the first three years of the Society, a position he held previously when the organization was still a Council.
Lew Terman now assumes the office of SSCS Past President. Terman will also be serving in the Office of Technical Activities Vice President-Elect, 2000 after an Institute-wide election.
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| Bruce Wooley President wooley@ee.stanford.edu |
Bruce A. Wooley is a Professor of Electrical Engineering, the Director of the Integrated Circuits Laboratory, and a Senior Associate Dean of Engineering at Stanford University. He received the B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of California, Berkeley in 1966, 1968, and 1970, respectively. From 1970 to 1984 he was a member of the research staff at Bell Laboratories in Holmdel, NJ, and he joined Stanford in 1984. His research is in the field of integrated circuit design, where his interests include oversampling A/D and D/A conversion, low-power mixed-signal circuit design, circuit design techniques for video and image data acquisition, high-speed embedded memory, high-performance packaging and testing, noise in mixed-signal integrated circuits, and circuits for high-speed communications.
Prof. Wooley is a Fellow of the IEEE. He has served as the Editor of the IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits and as the Chairman of both the International Solid-State Circuits Conference and the Symposium on VLSI Circuits. He is also a past Chairman of the IEEE Solid-State Circuits and Technology Committee, and he has been a member of the IEEE Solid-State Circuits Council, the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society AdCom, the Executive Committee of the ISSCC, and the Executive Committee of the Symposium on VLSI Circuits. He is currently the Vice President of the IEEE Solid-State Circuits Society. He has published more than 100 technical articles and is a coauthor of The Design of Low-Voltage, Low-Power Sigma-Delta Modulators. He is a coeditor of Analog MOS Integrated Circuits, II.
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| Charles Sodini Vice President sodini@mtl.mit.edu |
Charles G. Sodini rece-ived the B.S.E.E. degree from Purdue University, Lafayette, IN, in 1974, and the M.S.E.E. and the Ph.D. degrees from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1981 and 1982, respectively.
He was a member of the technical staff at Hewlett-Packard Laboratories from 1974 to 1982, where he worked on the design of MOS memory and later on the development of MOS devices with very thin gate di-electrics. He joined the faculty of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, in 1983, where he is currently a Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. His research interests are focused on integrated circuit and system design with emphasis on analog, RF, and memory circuits and systems. Along with Prof. Roger T. Howe, he is a co-author of an undergraduate text on integrated circuits and devices entitled Microelectronics: An Integrated Approach.
Dr. Sodini held the Analog Devices Career Development Professorship of Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and was awarded the IBM Faculty Development Award from 1985 to 1987. He has served on a variety of IEEE Conference Committees, including the International Electron Device Meeting, where he was the 1989 General Chairman. He was the Technical Program Co-Chairman for the 1992 Symposium on VLSI Circuits and was the 1993-1994 Co-Chairman of the Symposium. He has served on the Electron Device Society Administrative Committee from 1988-1994 and is currently a member of the Solid-State Circuits Society Administrative Committee, where he is the Meetings Committee Chairman. He is a Fellow of the IEEE.