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Laboratory for Empirical Software
Testing Research
Software testing is one of the principal Computer Science research
areas in the School of EECS. This laboratory is devoted to the
study of software testing techniques by empirical means. Research
projects being pursued in this lab include the study of techniques
for regression testing and for testing object-oriented and component-based
software.
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Collaborative Research in Microelectronics
(CRiME) Laboratory
The CRiME Lab has been equipped in the past year. It has equipment
worth $1 million and is housed in a 1,000 square-foot facility.
This laboratory is shared between five faculty working in the
design of RF/analog mixed-signal communication circuits and systems.
The lab has a characterization facility that consists of computer-controlled
instrumentation including DC to RF cascade probe stations, device
characterization equipment (semiconductor parameter analyzer),
mixed-signal circuit characterization equipment (oscilloscopes,
RF signal sources, data acquisition, arbitrary waveform generator,
logic analyzer), RF devices and circuit characterization equipment
(26 GHz spectrum analyzer, 20 GHz network analyzer), and communications
test equipment capable of generating almost all digital baseband
and RF modulation schemes and performing bit-error-rate and communication
channel measurements.
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Information Security Laboratory (ISL)
ISL is an organization of faculty and graduate student efforts
among the School of EECS, and the Mathematics Department at Oregon
State. The ISL performs research and development on the next generation
information security technologies. Concepts, tools, and techniques
are studied in diverse fields such as computer architecture, theoretical
computer science, communications, modern algebra, coding theory,
and cryptography. Dr. Çetin K. Koç is the founder
and director of ISL.
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Graphics & Image Technologies Laboratory
The IGVL supports research related to computer graphics, and vision. The lab currently consists of several
high-end dual processor workstations with state-of-the-art 3D
graphics acceleration hardware as well as disk arrays for efficient
storage and access of video sequences. The lab is also equipped
with cameras and display devices to support computer vision and
projection display. The lab provides researchers with hardware
and software to make progress in research areas including image
and video editing and enhancement, special effects, 3D interactive
interfaces, character animation, and 3D geometry representation.
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Microwave Laboratory
Includes an extensive set of equipment for time-and frequency-domain
measurement and characterization of active and passive devices
and structures, including electronic packaging and interconnects.
The equipment list includes several network analyzers, sampling
oscilloscopes with multiple 20 GHz sampling heads, spectrum analyzers
and frequency synthesizers, noise figure meter, probe station,
and basic EMI measurement equipment. In addition to the measurement
facilities, a microwave design software suite and electromagnetic
simulators are available.
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Wallace Energy Systems & Renewables Facility (WESRF)
The WESRF at OSU provides research, testing and consulting services related to motors, generators, adjustable speed drives, power electronics, power supplies, power quality, industrial process equipment, power systems and renewables. By using state-of-the-art facilities and the expertise of internationally recognized personnel, we are able to meet the most stringent of industry and utility requirements and testing standards.
Beginning operations in 1996 with donations from a consortium of sponsors, the WESRF soon established a reputation as a leading independent resource to industry. Our services to industry and utility customers continues to increase and now touches virtually every aspect of multi-scale Energy Systems, covering power levels from μW to MW. With a 750kVA independent utility power supply, comprehensive testbeds up to 300hp, and a 120kVA fully programmable AC source, the WESRF has the highest power ratings and is the best equipped Energy Systems laboratory in any university in the nation.
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Optics Laboratories
The undergraduate/graduate Optics Lab in Dearborn 300 houses six
floating optical breadboard tables, complete components for physical
optics, optoelectronics, and fiber optic experiments, electronic
test equipment, Pentium computers interfaced for data acquisition,
various laser sources including HeNe, visible and IR diode lasers,
CO2 and Nd:YAG, 0.5m spectrometer, Fabry-Perot interferometer,
fiber-coupled CCD spectrometer, optical spectrum analyzer and
numerous photodetectors. This laboratory is used for undergraduate
teaching and fiber Bragg grating sensor research.
The graduate Electro-Optics Laboratory in Owen 433 houses 2 large
floating optical tables plus computer controlled systems for photoluminescence,
thermoluminescence, and electroluminescence measurements from
10K to 400C. Optical excitation sources include an Ar ion laser,
Xe lamp, and a N2-pumped dye laser with doubling crystal. This
laboratory also houses a scanning electron microscope (SEM) that
is used to examine thin-film and microfabricated structures at
up to 2 million times magnification.
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Laboratory for Software Engineering
and End-User Programming
This research draws from the areas of programming languages, software
engineering, and human-computer interaction (HCI). This group
of Computer Science faculty and student researchers is working
on the issues that arise when end users "program," using
"languages" such as spreadsheets, web authoring languages,
CAD systems, educational simulation authoring packages, and more.
According to research based on U.S. government statistics, there
are almost 20 times as many end-user programmers as programmers
professionally trained in programming. Our project involves aspects
as diverse as the HCI issues of motivating end users to address
software quality control, to the program analysis that must be
done to infer software quality information, to the design and
implementation of new languages and environments for end-user
programming.
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Solid State Materials & Devices
Research Laboratories
Supports the design, fabrication, characterization, and simulation
of electronic, optoelectronic, microwave materials, devices, and
integrated circuits. Equipment for processing include systems
for RF sputtering, ion beam sputtering, thermal and electron beam
evaporation, activated reactive evaporation, plasma-enhanced chemical
vapor deposition, reactive ion etching, rapid thermal processing,
wet chemical processing, and photolithography. Characterization
equipment includes optical and mechanical thin film measurement
systems, Auger electron spectroscopy, scanning electron spectroscopy,
and measurement systems for the electrical, optoelectronic, and
microwave analysis.
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SWARM
The SWARM is a computer server built in the Beowulf
tradition; i.e., with commodity hardware and freely available
software. The development of SWARM has been funded by grants from
the National Science Foundation with additional contributions
from Oregon State University and Intel. The current SWARM grant
supports research in machine learning, computer graphics, and
intelligent information access. With more than 100 loosely-coupled
CPUs, the SWARM is used to perform large-scale experimental studies.
For example, in machine learning, it is applied to compare different
learning algorithms and to test alternative designs for new data
mining methods. In our information access work, it is applied
to test different methods for indexing and retrieving documents
from a large collection of scientific documents. The SWARM is
also well-suited for Monte Carlo-style computations in which the
same program is run many times with different random number seeds
and the results are combined to obtain a solution. It is also
possible to run parallel programs on the SWARM using C and the
MPI (Message Passing Interface) library, though the relatively
high latency and low bandwidth of the network means only relatively
coarse-grained computations can achieve reasonable speedup on
many processors.
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Usability Testing Facility
A testbed for systematically evaluating the usability and robustness
of software tools and interfaces, across a range of common desktop
platforms. The testing facility, installed in 1995, has been used
by software developers from industry as well as academic organizations,
in order to test whether tools and software can be invoked successfully
from a range of desktop platforms. Supports UNIX workstation systems
from IBM, Sun, HP, DEC, and SGI (typically, multiple machines from
each manufacturer, with differing hardware capabilities), the so-called
"Wintel" platforms, and Macintosh systems. We also keep
back releases of operating systems and key software. In some cases,
we have multiple network connections, so that we can also observe
the effects of network speed on display behavior. For testing Web
resources, we maintain a full range of browsers, both public-domain
and proprietary. We recently extended this support to a range of
servers, since we found (during recent tests) that server inconsistencies
can also be responsible for problematic behavior. We constantly
add new platforms as they become popular; for example, we recently
added a number of LINUX machines. |
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