Main Page
From The Circuits and Biology Lab at UMN
A collaborative website for Prof. Marc Riedel's research group at the University of Minnesota.
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.
- 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, presentations, theses, and funding proposals.
- See our "Tools" page for software tools that we have developed.
Announcements
- We welcome two new postdocs, Arnav Solanki and Farzad Razi!
- Our paper on computing with acids and bases has appeared in Nature Communications.
- Arnav has completed his Ph.D.
- We have received a $1,000,000 grant from the NSF for research on DNA storage (joint with Kate Adamala and David Soloveichik).
- Marc was named Oracle Research Fellow.
- We have received a $200,000 grant from Oracle.
- We have received an $118,000 grant from Seagate on DNA storage.
- We have received a $200,000 NSF grant for computational work on COVID 19.
- Our paper Computation of Mathematical Functions using DNA via Fractional via Fractional Coding has appeared in Nature Scientific Reports.
- We have received a $2,200,000 million grant from the DARPA Molecular Informatics Program to pursue research on DNA computing (joint with colleagues Olgica Milenkovic and the David Soloveichik).
- Hassan has completed his Ph.D. He has accepted a tenure-track position at the University of Louisiana.
- Ahmad has completed his Ph.D. He has accepted a tenure-track position at the University of Kentucky.
- Our paper on polysynchronous clocking was the IEEE Transaction on Computers "Feature Paper of the Month."
- Our work on a deterministic approach to stochastic computing has received critical acclaim: it upends the conventional thinking on stochastic computing (a field that we pioneered back in 2008).
- Ahmad has received the Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship.
- We received two NSF Grants:
- $800,000 for a proposal titled Back to the Future with Printed, Flexible Electronics Design (joint with UMN colleagues Kia Bazargan, Ramesh Harjani, David Lilja, and Dan Frisbie).
- $300,000 for a proposal titled Advanced Signal Processing with DNA (joint with UMN colleague Keshab Parhi).
- John has earned his Ph.D. He joined Rockwell Collins.
- Mustafa has earned his Ph.D. He has accepted a tenure-track position at the Istanbul Technical University.
- Hua has earned his Ph.D. He joined Synopsys.
- We received a $400,000 grant from the NSF for research on signal processing with DNA (joint with UMN colleague Keshab Parhi).
- John received the Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship.
- We received a $300,000 grant from the NSF for research on stochastic computing (joint with UMN colleagues Kia Bazargan, Ramesh Harjani, and David Lilja).
- The Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota has conferred indefinite tenure on Marc.
- Weikang has earned his Ph.D. He has accepted a tenure-track position at the University of Michigan–Shanghai Jiao Tong University Joint Institute.
- Weikang has received the Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship.
- We have received a $100,00 grant for research on synthetic biology from the Digital Technology Center (joint with UMN colleagues Yiannis Kaznessis and Claudia Dannert Schmidt).
- We have received a $200,000 grant from the NSF for research on signal processing with DNA (joint with UMN colleague Keshab Parhi).
- We have received a $500,000 NSF grant along with Marc's NSF CAREER Award.
- Marc has received the NSF CAREER Award for his research on "things small, wet, and random." This is the National Science Foundation's most prestigious award in support of junior faculty.
- We have received a $78,000 grant for research on stochastic simulation of chemical reactions from the BICB program (joint with IBM Rochester).
- We have received a $325,000 grant for research on probabilistic computing from the Center on Functional Engineered Nano Architectonics (FENA), a joint Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC)/Department of Defense research center.