Welcome to the homepage of Dr. Yiyu Shi
Yiyu
Shi, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor,
Site Associate Director, NSF I/UCRC Net-Centric Software & Systems (NCSS) Center
Electrical and Computer Engineering Department
Missouri University of Science and Technology
formerly University of Missouri, Rolla
Email : yshi
AT mst DOT
edu
Yiyu
Shi received his B.S. degree
(with honors) in Electronic
Engineering from
Tsinghua University,
Beijing, China in 2005, the M.S and Ph.D. degree in
Electrical Engineering
from the University of
California, Los Angeles in 2007 and 2009
respectively. He was with the
Electrical and Computer
Engineering Department at
Carnegie Mellon University
from Dec 2009 to April 2010. He joined the faculty of
Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at
Missouri University of Science and Technology from Sept.
2010. His current research interest include
advanced design and test technologies for 3D ICs, and
renewable energy applications. In recognition of his
research, five of his papers
have been nominated for
the Best Paper Award in top conferences (DAC'05,
ICCAD'07, ICCD'08, ASPDAC'09, DAC'09).
He was also the recipient of the IBM Invention
Achievement Award in 2009, the second placer winner of TAU power grid analysis contest (sponsored by IBM) in 2011, and the third place winner of ISPD Discrete Gate Sizing Contest in 2012. For more information, please
refer to his C.V.
here.
Currently openings are available for Ph.D. students interested in the area of computer-aided design (CAD) of advanced circuit constructs including, but not limited to, three dimensional integrated circuits (3D ICs) and asynchronous computing. Preference will be given to M.S. students with strong background in maths (especially statistics or optimization) and/or C/C++ programming.
If interested, you may send an email with a copy of your CV and transcript to the email address listed above. Due to the large number of applications, not all emails will be replied.
About the program: The ECE graduate program at Missouri S&T is consistently ranked between 50 and 66 by the US News and World Report in the past.