Teresa Meng

 

  Teresa Meng

Teresa H. Meng is the Reid Weaver Dennis Professor of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University. Her research activities during the first 10 years at Stanford included low-power circuit and system design, video signal processing, and wireless communications. She has received many awards and honors for her research work at Stanford: including an NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award, an ONR Young Investigator Award, an IBM Faculty Development Award, a Bosch Faculty Scholar Award, a Best Paper Award and a Distinguished Lecturer Award from the IEEE Signal Processing Society, the Eli Jury Award from U.C. Berkeley, and awards from AT&T, TRW, Okawa Foundation and other industry and academic organizations.

In 1999, Dr. Meng took leave from Stanford and founded Atheros Communications, Inc., which is a leading developer of semiconductor system solutions for wireless and other network communications products. Dr. Meng was named one of the Top 10 Entrepreneurs in 2001 by Red Herring, Innovator of the Year in 2002 by MIT Sloan School eBA, the CIO 20/20 Vision Award in 2002, and the DEMO@15 World-Class Innovator Award in 2005. She returned to Stanford in 2000 to continue her research and teaching at the University. In 2009 she received the 2008 Pederson Award.

Dr. Meng's current research interests focus on circuit optimization, neural signal processing, and computation architectures for systems biology. She has given plenary talks at major conferences in the areas of signal processing and wireless communications. She is the author of one book, several book chapters, and over 200 technical articles in journals and conferences. Dr. Meng is a Fellow of the IEEE and a member of the National Academy of Engineering. She received her M.S. and Ph.D. in EECS from the University of California at Berkeley and her B.S. from National Taiwan University.

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