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James Morizio, Adjunct Professor of Electrical & Computer Engineering and Energy Initiative

James Morizio

Dr. Morizio received the BS EE degree from Virginia Polytechnic Institute in 1982, and the MSEE degree from Univeristy of Colorado in 1984. In 1995 he completed his Ph.D. degree in Electrical Engineering from Duke University.

Dr. Morizio also has over 20 years corporate experience working with IBM Corporation and Mitsubishi Electronics America here in RTP, NC.

James Morizio joined Duke University in September 1995. He is currently a Assistant Research Professor in ECE and is also President of Triangle BioSystems, Inc., where he project leads numerous mixed-signal broadband and audio VLSI design projects. He conducts research in the areas of mixed-signal VLSI design and sub-system hardware development for biomedical instrumentation products. His current research is focused on the design and test of telemetric, low power, integrated data acquisition systems for brain source neural signals. He teaches graduate courses on Full Custom VLSI Design (EE261) and Integrated Analog Circuit Design (EE262).

Contact Info:
Office Location:  219 Hudson Hall
Office Phone:  (919) 201-7759
Email Address: send me a message
Web Page:  http://www.ee.duke.edu/~jmorizio/

Teaching (Spring 2024):

  • ECE 532.01, ANALOG INTEG CIR DSGN Synopsis
    Hudson 216, TuTh 11:45 AM-01:00 PM
Teaching (Fall 2024):

  • ECE 539.01, CMOS VLSI DESIGN METHODOLOGIES Synopsis
    Teer 106, TuTh 11:45 AM-01:00 PM
Specialties:

Computer Engineering
Nanoscale/microscale computing systems
Biological Computing
Mixed Signal VLSI Design
Integrated Analog CMOS Circuit Design
Research Interests:

He conducts research in the areas of mixed-signal VLSI design and sub-system hardware development for biomedical instrumentation products.

Recent Publications   (More Publications)

  1. Morizio, J. and Irazoqui, P. and Go, V. and Parmentier, J., Wireless headstage for neural prosthetics, 2nd International IEEE EMBS Conference on Neural Engineering, vol. 2005 (2005), pp. 414 - 417, Arlington, VA, United States [CNE.2005.1419647]  [abs]
  2. Arora, Himanshu and Klemmer, Nikolaus and Morizio, James C. and Wolf, Patrick D., Enhanced phase noise modeling of fractional-N frequency synthesizers, IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, vol. 52 no. 2 (2005), pp. 379 - 395 [TCSI.2004.841594]  [abs]
  3. Lee, Sangrok and Morizio, James C. and Johnson, Kristina M., Novel frame buffer pixel circuits for liquid-crystal-on-silicon microdisplays, IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. 39 no. 1 (2004), pp. 132 - 139 [JSSC.2003.820875]  [abs]
  4. Morizio, J. and Guhados, S. and Castellucci, J. and von Ramm, O., 64-channel ultrasound transducer amplifier, 2003 Southwest Symposium on Mixed-Signal Design (Cat. No.03EX663) (2003), pp. 228 - 32, Las Vegas, NV, USA [SSMSD.2003.1190432]  [abs]
  5. Obeid, Iyad and Morizio, James C. and Moxon, Karen A. and Nicolelis, Miguel A. L. and Wolf, Patrick D., Two multichannel integrated circuits for neural recording and signal processing, IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, vol. 50 no. 2 (2003), pp. 255 - 258 [TBME.2002.807643]  [abs]


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