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I am a currently a doctoral candidate in the department of
Electrical
and Computer Engineering at Carnegie
Mellon University. Before this I completed my M.S. Degree
(2004) at Carnegie Mellon
University and
acquired my B.Tech. degree (2002) from Indian Institute of
Technology, Kanpur.
AREAS OF EXPERTISE
§
Design, Test and Diagnosis of
Integrated Systems
§
Statistical analysis of
performance specifications -
Manufacturing and Test Strategy development
§
Failure analysis and Defect
characterization
§
Quality and Reliability
analysis
§
6+ years of software tool
development using C/C++ and other high level programming
languages
PUBLICATIONS
[1]
S. Biswas and R. D. Blanton, “Statistical Test Compaction using Binary
Decision Trees,” IEEE Design & Test of Computers: Special Issue on
Process Variation and Stochastic Design and Test, vol.
23, no. 6, pp. 452 – 462 , Jun. 2006.
[2]
S. Biswas, P. Li, R. D. Blanton and
L. T. Pileggi, “Specification Test Compaction for Analog
Circuits and MEMS,” Proc. of Design, Automation and Test Conf. in Europe,
pp. 164 – 169, Mar. 2005.
[3]
S. Biswas, K. N. Dwarakanath and R.
D. Blanton, “Generalized Sensitization using Fault Tuples,” Proc. of VLSI Test Symp., pp. 297 – 303, Apr.
2004.
[4]
S. Biswas, “Generalized Sensitization Using Fault Tuples,” Master’s
Thesis, Carnegie Mellon University, Apr. 2004.
[5]
S. Biswas and B. Mazhari,
“A Path Sensitization for Testing Switched
Capacitor Circuits,” Proc. of Intl. Conf. on VLSI Design, pp. 30
– 35, Jan. 2003.
SOME THOUGHTS
It is widely accepted that if you say anything you want
you cannot be famous, but if you are famous you can say
anything. That means famous people become famous by saying
only what is generally accepted. So can there really be any
revolutionary idea? Or are all ideas just materialization of
what is everybody generally believes?
MY RESUME
Here are the pdf
and msword
vesrions of my resume.
Sounil
Biswas, 2007
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