Main Page
From The Circuits and Biology Lab at UMN
A collaborative website for the Circuits and Biology group.
About the Group
The group consists of Prof. Marc Riedel and his students in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Minnesota. Our research activities encompass topics in logic synthesis and verification, as well as in synthetic and computational biology. A broad theme is the application of expertise from digital circuit design to new areas such as nanoscale technologies and biological engineering.
- See our "People" page for a list of everyone in the group.
- See our "Research" page for an overview of our research activities.
- See our "Publications" page for our papers, theses, proposals, and slides.
- See our "Tools" page for software tools that we have developed.
- See our "Teaching" page for courses that Marc teaches.
Announcements
- John has earned his Ph.D. He joined Rockwell Collins in April, 2013
- Marc gave the keynote address at PATMOS in September, 2012.
- Mustafa has earned his Ph.D. He joined the Istanbul Technical University as an Assistant Professor in September, 2012.
- Hua has earned his Ph.D. He joined Synopsys in June, 2012.
- The Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota has conferred indefinite tenure on Marc in May, 2012.
- John received the Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship, a prestigious university-wide award for top doctoral candidates at the University of Minnesota, in May, 2012.
- Our group received a $400,000 grant from the NSF Computing and Communications Foundations Program in May, 2012.
- Weikang has earned his Ph.D. He joined the University of Michigan–Shanghai Jiao Tong University Joint Institute as an Assistant Professor in September 2011.
- Weikang received the Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship, a prestigious university-wide award for top doctoral candidates, in May, 2010.
- Our group received a $200,000 grant from the NSF Computing and Communications Foundations Program in June, 2009.
- Our group received a $500,000 grant with the NSF CAREER Award, in June, 2009.
- Marc received a NSF CAREER Award, the National Science Foundation's most prestigious award in support of junior faculty, in June, 2009.
- Our group received a $325,000 grant from the Center on Functional Engineered Nano Architectonics (FENA), a joint Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC)/Department of Defense research center, in August, 2006.

