Rajesh K. Gupta

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Rajesh Kumar Gupta (* 1961 ) is an Indian-American computer scientist and systems engineer.

Gupta studied electrical engineering at IIT in Kanpur with a bachelor's degree in 1984 and electrical engineering and computer science from the University of California, Berkeley with a master's degree in 1986. He received his doctorate in 1994 from Stanford University . He was on three processor design teams at Intel , was at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the University of California, Irvine before becoming a professor at the University of California, San Diego .

He deals with embedded systems, energy-efficient system architectures, cyber-physical systems ( Internet of Things ). He worked on modeling with SystemC and the design software SPARK for parallelized high-level synthesis.

In 2019 he received the W. Wallace McDowell Award for fundamental contributions to the design and implementation of microelectronic systems-on-chip and cyber-physical systems (laudatory speech). He is a Fellow of the IEEE , the Association for Computing Machinery, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science .

Fonts (selection)

  • with G. De Micheli: Hardware-software cosynthesis for digital systems, IEEE Design & Test of Computers, Volume 10, 1993, pp. 29-41
  • Co-synthesis of hardware and software for digital embedded systems, Springer 1995
  • with G. De Micheli: Hardware / software co-design, Proceedings of the IEEE, Volume 84, 1997, pp. 349-365
  • with Sumit Gupta, Nikil Dutt, Alexandru Nicolau: SPARK: a parallelizing approach to the high-level synthesis of digital circuits, Kluwer 2004
  • as editor with Paul Le Guernic a. a .: Formal Methods and Models for System Design: A System Level Perspective, Springer 2004

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rajesh Gupta, Sumit Gupta, Nikil Dutt, Alexandru Nicolau: SPARK: a parallelizing approach to the high-level synthesis of digital circuits, Kluwer 2004
  2. For seminal contributions in design and implementation of Microelectronic Systems-on-Chip and Cyberphysical Systems