Electrical & Computer Engineering Newsletter: March 2024

Message From the Chair

Welcome to the March issue of the Electrical & Computer Engineering Newsletter. This month we bring you news of NSF funding, a new research center, and other student and faculty achievements. I hope you enjoy reading about our accomplishments as we continue in the development of technology to serve humanity through innovation.

— Paul McGrath, Chair/Professor of Electrical & Computer Engineering

NSF Curriculum Grant

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Headshots Daqing Hou, Jeanna Matthews, Jan DeWaters, and Faraz Hussain

Two Electrical & Computer Engineering professors are among a team that has received a $398K grant from the NSF to create and integrate an identity and access management-themed, project-based learning curriculum into existing computer science- and software engineering-related curricula.
Read More About this Grant
 

New Sustainable Vehicle Tech

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Shoulders-up portrait of Chen Liu in a grey sports jacket and black shirt

Clarkson is part of a new NSF Industry-University Cooperative Research Center tasked with developing sustainable mobility technologies, such as electrification, smart infrastructure and resilient computing systems. Associate Professor Chen Liu will serve as the Clarkson site director of the Center for Electric, Connected and Autonomous Technologies for Mobility (eCAT).
Read More About the eCAT
 

NSF Funding for Conference

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Summer exterior drone shot of the Center for Advanced Materials Processing building with the sun setting in the background over green trees

Professor Erik Bollt and Research Assistant Professor Jeremie Fish are among the co-principal investigators on an NSF grant that will fund the organization of the Seventh Northeast Regional Conference on Complex Systems being held at Clarkson in March. The grant allows Clarkson to offer travel awards to students, postdoctoral researchers and early career faculty and researchers.
Read More About This Funding
 

Power Symposium Presentation

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Waist-up portrait of Devin Hodoroski in a vertically striped shirt standing in front of a PoerPoint screen reading "Impact of Climate Change on Long-Term Baseload Forecasting: Case Studies in New York State"

Electrical engineering major and honors student Devin Hodoroski presented his research at the 2023 North American Power Symposium conference. The research highlighted in his paper, "Impact of Climate Change on Long-Term Load Forecasting: Case Studies in New York State,” looks at how rising temperatures from climate change will impact the power grid.
Read More About This Research

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