啥叫scientific footnotes引用?# Immigration - 落地生根
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DUYGU KUZUM received her Ph.D in Electrical Engineering from
Stanford University in 2010. She is currently a postdoctoral researcher at
University of Pennsylvania, Bioengineering Department. Her research focuses
on applying innovations in nanoelectronics to develop new technologies,
which
will help to better understand circuit-level computation in the brain. She
developed nanoelectronic synaptic devices emulating the synaptic computation
and plasticity in human brain. This technology could lead to portable and
energy-efficient computers that can learn and process information in real
time
similar to human brain. Recently, she has been working on developing novel
tools to probe brain circuits with high spatial and temporal precision. She
is the author or coauthor of over
40 journal and conference papers. Her work on nanoelectronic devices was
featured on the cover of Nano
Letters, highlighted in Nature and covered by several media outlets (New
Scientist, Stanford News Report,
Nanowerk, EE Times). She was a recipient of a number of awards, including
Texas Instruments Fellowship
and Intel Foundation Fellowship, PopTech Science and Public Leaders
Fellowship (2013) Award, Penn
Neuroscience Pilot Innovative Research Award (2014), TASSA (Turkish-American
Scientists and Scholars)
Young Investigator Award (2014), and Innovators under 35 (TR35) by MIT
Technology Review (2014).
Stanford University in 2010. She is currently a postdoctoral researcher at
University of Pennsylvania, Bioengineering Department. Her research focuses
on applying innovations in nanoelectronics to develop new technologies,
which
will help to better understand circuit-level computation in the brain. She
developed nanoelectronic synaptic devices emulating the synaptic computation
and plasticity in human brain. This technology could lead to portable and
energy-efficient computers that can learn and process information in real
time
similar to human brain. Recently, she has been working on developing novel
tools to probe brain circuits with high spatial and temporal precision. She
is the author or coauthor of over
40 journal and conference papers. Her work on nanoelectronic devices was
featured on the cover of Nano
Letters, highlighted in Nature and covered by several media outlets (New
Scientist, Stanford News Report,
Nanowerk, EE Times). She was a recipient of a number of awards, including
Texas Instruments Fellowship
and Intel Foundation Fellowship, PopTech Science and Public Leaders
Fellowship (2013) Award, Penn
Neuroscience Pilot Innovative Research Award (2014), TASSA (Turkish-American
Scientists and Scholars)
Young Investigator Award (2014), and Innovators under 35 (TR35) by MIT
Technology Review (2014).