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Officers - 2011


BRUCE DOYLE - Chair, IEEE Member
Bruce Doyle (M’84) received the B.S.E.E. degree from Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada in 1984.  Since 1984, he has been involved in the design of memories, graphics processors, analog circuits, mixed-signal IC’s, and high-performance microprocessors.  From 2002 to 2006, he worked for Hewlett-Packard / Intel in Fort Collins, CO, on the Itanium family of high-performance microprocessors as a physical designer in high-speed I/Os, clocking, and thermal systems.  Currently, he is a Principal Member of Technical Staff at Advanced Micro Devices in Fort Collins, CO, where he develops advanced wireline I/O architectures.  His expertise includes high-speed circuit design, analog circuit design, and mixed-signal verification.  He holds 11 US patents.

ALVIN LOKE - Vice Chair / Webmaster, IEEE Senior Member

Alvin Loke (S'89-M'99-SM'04) received the B.A.Sc. (Eng. Physics) degree with highest honors from the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada, in 1992, and the M.S.E.E. and Ph.D.E.E. degrees from Stanford University in 1994 and 1999 respectively.  He was recipient of the Canadian NSERC 1967 Graduate Scholarship.  While at Stanford, his research focused on copper interconnects with low-K polymer dielectric.  He has interned at Texas Instruments, Motorola, and at Sumitomo Electric Industries (Osaka).  In 1998, he joined Hewlett-Packard Labs, Palo Alto, CA where he was involved in embedded ferroelectric memory technology.  In 1999, when Agilent Technologies divested from Hewlett-Packard, he was assigned to Chartered Semiconductor Manufacturing, Singapore, to integrate copper and local interconnects.

In 2001, he transferred to Fort Collins, CO, where he designed CMOS phase-locked loop circuits for low-jitter embedded SerDes I/O and ASIC core clocking. In 2006, he joined Advanced Micro Devices where he is currently a Principal Member of Technical Staff designing high-speed links and interfacing with technology teams on analog/mixed-signal concerns.  Dr. Loke has authored over 30 technical publications and holds 10 US patents.  He presently serves on the CICC technical program committee, SSCS Chapters committee, and is a technical reviewer for IEEE journals.  He is also an active member of the ECE Department Industrial Advisory Board at Colorado State University.

BOB BARNES - Treasurer, IEEE Senior Member
Bob Barnes (S'77-M'81-SM'05) received his B.S.E.E. degree (summa cum laude) from Washington State University, Pullman, WA, in 1980, and the M.S.E.E. degree from Stanford University, Stanford, CA, in 1987.  Prior to his undergraduate studies, he served in the United States Air Force as an Electronics Technician repairing and maintaining ground-based navigation transmitters.  He joined Hewlett-Packard's Disk Memory Division, Boise, ID, in 1980 where he worked on disk drive head/servo characterization, and advanced read channel designs.  In 1996, he joined Hewlett-Packard's (now Avago Technologies') integrated circuits design center in Fort Collins, CO where he is currently a Senior Design Engineer developing 90nm and 65nm CMOS mixed-signal phase-locked loop architectures and circuits for low-jitter embedded SerDes I/O applications.  He holds eight US patents in areas of disk drive and IC design, and has authored two papers.

STEVE MARTIN - Secretary, IEEE Member

Steve Martin (S’99-M’05) received a B.S.E.E. with highest honors from the University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, in 1999 and M.S.E.E. and Ph.D.E.E. from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, in 2002 and 2005, respectively.  He is a recipient of a NSF Graduate Research Fellowship.  His research focused on CMOS-integrated chemical sensors for trace environmental detection and low-power, low-noise analog and digital circuits.  Dr. Martin has held positions at Accuri Instruments where he developed a low-noise analog front end for a novel flow cytometer, at Sonetics Ultrasound where he designed analog integrated electronics for a CMUT array, and at Intel Corp. where he designed a 6Gb/s line driver in 65nm CMOS.  He is currently with Avago Technologies, Fort Collins, CO, where he is a research scientist developing acoustic technologies.  Dr. Martin has over a dozen technical publications, has served as a reviewer for several SBIR programs, and has co-authored a book chapter on CMOS-integrated chemical sensors.


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