People > Faculty
Brian Otis
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Dr. Brian Otis |
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Phone: 206.616.5998 Office: M430, UWEE building E-mail: botis@uw.edu |
University of California Berkeley, 2005 Ph.D.
University of California, Berkeley, 2002 M.S.
University of Washington, Seattle, 1999 B.S.
Brian Otis joined the University of Washington Department of Electrical Engineering in 2005. His M.S. and Ph.D. were completed at U.C. Berkeley with Prof. Jan Rabaey. He has worked previously at the University of Washington Kelly Tremblay Brain and Behavior Laboratory, the U.C. Berkeley Ralph Freeman Neuroscience Lab, Intel Corporation, Agilent Laboratories, and Google Inc. He is currently a member of the Technical Program Committee of the International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) and is Associate Editor of the Journal of Solid State Circuits (JSSC) as of June 2013.
Research Interests
One of my passions is exploring the fundamental limitations of power and size of integrated circuits and systems. I run a chip design research lab with an emphasis on tiny, low power chips for a variety of applications (ranging from tiny clocks to neural recording to active contact lenses to wireless electrophysiological interfaces).
Click here for a video on our Encounternet project.
Click here for a video on the contact lens project.
In general, the interface between the IC and the outside world is of interest to me: we have published on RF transceivers, biosignal interfaces, MEMS sensor interfaces, intertial sensors, etc. Finally, I have a strong interest in time/frequency references. Through a longstanding collaboration with Avago Technologies, we are working on extremely small, low power, and pure frequency references and clocks.
Please visit the Wireless Sensing Group website to learn more and download papers.
Teaching
Fall 2011: Undergraduate Radio Lab (ee400)
Spring 2011: Devices and Circuits II (ee332)
Winter 2011: Analog IC Design (ee473)
Fall 2010: Undergraduate Radio Lab. An Introduction to Wireless Circuits and Systems (ee400e)
Winter 2010: Devices and Circuits II (ee332)
Fall 2009: Linear Analog Integrated Circuit Design (ee473)
Spring 2009: Undergraduate Radio Lab. An Introduction to Wireless Circuits and Systems (ee400e)
Winter 2009: Devices and Circuits II (ee332)
Fall 2008: Linear Analog Integrated Circuit Design (ee473)
Spring 2008: Devices and Circuits II (ee332)
Fall 2007: Linear Analog Integrated Circuit Design (ee473)
Spring 2007: Radio Frequency Integrated Circuit Design & Analysis (ee538)Winter 2007: Topics in Low Power Microsystems (ee500)
Fall 2006: Linear Analog Integrated Circuit Design (ee473)
Spring 2006: Radio Frequency Integrated Circuit Design & Analysis (ee538)
Fall 2005: Linear Analog Integrated Circuit Design (ee473)
Interested in undergraduate independent study?
Honors
2011: U.W. College of Engineering Junior Faculty Innovator Award
2009: National Science Foundation CAREER Award
2008: University of Washington Electrical Engineering Outstanding Teaching Award
2007: University of Washington Electrical Engineering Outstanding Research Advisor Award
2004: Berkeley Sensor and Actuator Center Industrial Advisory Board Best Paper Award
2004: Analog Devices Outstanding Designer Fellowship
2003: U.C. Berkeley EECS Dept. Seven Rosen Funds Departmental Award for Innovation
2003: ISLPED Student Design Contest Competition Award
2002: ISSCC Jack Raper Outstanding Paper Award
