Andreas G. Andreou received his Ph.D. in electrical
engineering and computer science in 1986 from Johns Hopkins University.
Between 1986 and 1989 he held post-doctoral fellow and associate research
scientist positions in the Electrical and Computer engineering department
while also a member of the professional staff at the Johns Hopkins Applied
Physics Laboratory. Andreou became an assistant professor of Electrical and
Computer engineering in 1989, associate professor in 1993 and professor in
1996. He is also a professor of Computer Science and of the Whitaker
Biomedical Engineering Institute and director of the Institute's Fabrication
and Lithography Facility in Clark Hall. He is the co-founder of the Johns
Hopkins University Center for Language and Speech Processing. Between 2001 and
2003 he was the founding director of the ABET accredited undergraduate
Computer Engineering program. In 1996 and 1997 he was a visiting professor of
the computation and neural systems program at the California Institute of
Technology. In 1989 and 1991 he was awarded the R.W. Hart Prize for his work
on mixed analog/digital integrated circuits for space applications. He is the
recipient of the 1995 and 1997 Myril B. Reed Best Paper Award and the 2000
IEEE Circuits and Systems Society, Darlington Best Paper Award. During the
summer of 2001 he was a visiting professor in the department of systems
engineering and machine intelligence at Tohoku University. In 2006, Prof.
Andreou was elected as an IEEE Fellow and a distinguished lecturer of the IEEE
EDS society.
Andreou's research interests include sensors, micropower electronics,
heterogeneous microsystems, and information processing in biological systems.
He is a co-editor of the IEEE Press book: Low-Voltage/Low-Power Integrated
Circuits and Systems, 1998 (translated in Japanese) and the Kluwer Academic
Publishers book: Adaptive Resonance Theory Microchips, 1998. He is an
associate editor of IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems.