Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Admission to the Graduate School is highly selective with an acceptance rate of approximately 11.7% across all disciplines. The average Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores for admitted students were 163 out of 170 on the verbal section, 161 out of 170 on the quantitative section and 4.5 out of 6 on the analytical writing section. [ 16 ]
Princeton University (1995) 248pp, heavily illustrated; Rhinehart Raymond. Princeton University: The Campus Guide (2000), 188pp, guide to architecture; Smith, Richard D. Princeton University (2005) 128pp; Synnott, Marcia Graham. The Half-Opened Door: Discrimination and Admissions at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, 1900–1970 (1979). 310 pp.
He currently serves as a professor of Electrical Engineering at Columbia University. He earned a BS degree in electrical engineering and applied mathematics from Shanghai Jiaotong University, an MS degree in electrical and computer engineering from Purdue University, and a PhD from Princeton University in electrical engineering. [2]
The Graduate College at Princeton University is a residential college which serves as the center of graduate student life at Princeton, separate from the seven undergraduate residential colleges. Wyman House, adjacent to the Graduate College, serves as the official residence of the current Dean of the Graduate School.
Naomi Ehrich Leonard is the Edwin S. Wilsey Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at Princeton University.She is the director of the Princeton Council on Science and Technology and an associated faculty member in the Program in Applied & Computational Mathematics, Princeton Neuroscience Institute, and the Program in Quantitative and Computational Biology. [2]
Andrea Goldsmith (right) at the panel discussion after the August 2, 2019, screening of The Bit Player at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California. Andrea Goldsmith FREng [1] is an American electrical engineer and the Dean of Engineering and Applied Science at Princeton University.
Paul R. Prucnal (born 1953) is an American electrical engineer. He is a professor of electrical engineering at Princeton University.He is best known for his seminal work in Neuromorphic Photonics, [1] optical code division multiple access (OCDMA) and the invention of the terahertz optical asymmetric demultiplexor (TOAD). [2]
She went to Stanford University for her graduate studies, earning a master's degree in computer science and computer engineering in 1975, and a doctorate in electrical engineering in 1980. After briefly teaching at Stanford, she joined Hewlett-Packard in 1981, eventually becoming a chief architect there in 1992, and holding a consulting faculty ...