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The School of Electrical, Computer, and Biomedical Engineering (ECBE) provides graduate programs and research opportunities leading to: i) a Master of Engineering (M.E.) in Electrical and Computer Engineering, ii) a Master of Science (M.S.) with thesis or non-thesis options in Electrical and Computer Engineering, and iii) a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Electrical and Computer Engineering.
Students benefit from a dynamic academic environment that fosters growth in these key disciplines:
Electrical Systems: Self-driving Vehicles, Control Mechanisms, Robotics, Sustainable Energy & Power Grids, EV Technology, Medical Devices, Optical & Photonic Systems, Antenna Design
Microelectronics: EDA Tools, Next-Gen Nano/Quantum Tech, VLSI Circuits, Integrated Systems, Biomedical Electronics, Sensor Technology
Signals and Communications: Visual Data Processing, Signal Analysis, Wireless Communications, Network Infrastructure
Hardware and Firmware: Processor Architectures, Embedded Devices, Networked Systems, Industrial Robotics, PLC Systems
Systems Software: Distributed Cloud Systems, EDA Tools, Parallel Processing, Scientific Computing, OS Development, Software Design, Low-Level Programming.
ECBE's curriculum blends rigorous coursework with hands-on research, customized to each student's career aspirations. Program alumni secure top positions globally across industrial, governmental, and academic sectors.
The M.S. in Electrical and Computer Engineering offers two pathways: i) A course-intensive non-thesis option, and ii) A research-focused thesis track ideal for future doctoral candidates. Both degree formats typically require 3-4 semesters to complete.