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Bio-inspired Solid-State Imagers: Learning from the Rod Cell, Hair Cell, and the Compound Eye
| What |
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|---|---|
| When |
Apr 20, 2009 from 01:00 PM to 02:00 PM |
| Where | 54-134 EIV |
| Add event to calendar |
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Hooman Mohseni
Northwestern University
Monday, April 20, 2009 at 1:00PM
54-134 Engineering IV Building
Refreshments Served
Abstract:
Current optical imagers, from the simple cell-phone cameras to the most
sophisticated space and military imagers are based on optics and sensors
that are drastically different form biological imagers. Interestingly,
biological imagers are many orders of magnitude better than manmade
imagers, when important parameters such as signal to noise ratio,
dynamic range, weight, and power consumption are compared.
In this talk we describe some of the underlying mechanisms in biological
imagers, and show how they are used at our lab to make new solid-state
(semiconductor) imagers with orders of magnitude improved performance.
Biography:
Hooman Mohseni received his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from
Northwestern University in 2001. He then joined Sarnoff Corporation,
where he was a technology leader for several government, domestic, and
international commercial projects. He joined Northwestern University in
2004 as a faculty member. Dr. Mohseni is the recipient of the best
student paper award from International Semiconductor Device Research
Symposium 1999, the Best Ph.D. Thesis Award from Robert McCormick School
of Engineering in 2001, was a Searle Junior Fellow in 2005, recipient
of National Science Foundation CARRER Award in 2006, and was selected by
NSF as one of the 14 US members of the US-Japan Young Scientist
Exchange Program on Nanotechnology in 2006, and US-Korea
Nano-manufacturing Program in 2007. He received the Young Faculty Award
from Defense Advanced Project Agency (DARPA) in 2007. He has served as
the Program Chair and Co-chair in several major conferences including
IEEE Photonics (LEOS) Annual Meeting, SPIE Optics and Photonics, and
SPIE Security and Defense. Dr. Mohseni has published over 60 articles in
refereed journals and proceedings, a chapter of a book on IR detectors,
and holds ten US and International patents. He has presented more than
30 keynote and invited talks at different commercial, government, and
educational institutes.
