Rice Center for Neuroengineering

The Rice Center for Neuroengineering is an interdisciplinary research center, founded in 2014, housed within Rice University's Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. The center is funded by an NSF IGERT grant,[1] DARPA, the W.M. Keck Foundation, and Texas Instruments. Partner Institutions include Rice University, Baylor College of Medicine, the University of Texas Health Science Center, and the Gulf Coast Consortia. Facilities are located on the Rice University campus and in the Texas Medical Center.

Rice Center for Neuroengineering
Established2014
Mission"Provide an environment that will foster collaboration between researchers, scientists, doctors and clinicians—and ultimately maximize research impact by working across traditional boundaries."
OwnerRice University
Location
Texas, United States
Websiteneuroengineering.rice.edu

The center's research centers on the fundamental understanding of coding and computation in the human brain, as well as developing technology to treat and diagnose neural disease.[2] Individual faculty research includes integrating neural circuits at the cellular level, analyzing neuronal data in real-time, and manipulating healthy or diseased neural circuit activity and connectivity using nano electronics,[3] optics, and emerging photonics technologies.[4]

The center's mission is to "provide an environment that will foster collaboration between researchers, scientists, doctors and clinicians—and ultimately maximize research impact by working across traditional boundaries."[5]

Notable faculty

The center's faculty include medical doctors, electrical and computer engineers, computer scientists, bioengineers, and neural scientists and engineers. Among notable members of the faculty are:

gollark: Not enough 68000s, but otherwise yes.
gollark: I see. It may be more suitable for inference applications.
gollark: Does it have floating point numbers?
gollark: You mean "yes".
gollark: Anyway, I'm sure it has low enough overhead that you could train a MNIST classifier or something on StupidVM.

References

  1. "Project Profile: IGERT: Neuroengineering from Cells to Systems". igert.org. Retrieved 2015-07-06.
  2. "Rice Researchers To Develop Epilepsy "Pacemaker"" (Press release). Rice University, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. August 2014.
  3. "Rice Realtime Neural Engineering Lab". nel.rice.edu. Retrieved 2015-07-06.
  4. "Jacob T. Robinson | Nano-neurotechnology @ Rice". robinsonlab.com. Retrieved 2015-07-06.
  5. "About". Rice Neuroengineering. Rice University. What We Do: Our Mission. Retrieved 2015-07-08.
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