Graduate Program Graduates from May, 1995

The following Masters and Doctorate theses were completed during the past academic year. Please contact Dr. W.T. Miller if you would like additional information about these theses.

Brant Buchika - Application of CMAC Neural Networks to a Quadruped Robot Walking with a Trotting Gait, June, 1996.

Brian Dann - Front End Electronics Development for the Minute-of-Arc Resolution Gamma-Radiation Imaging Experiment (MARGIE), March 1996.

Matthew Denham - CMAC Based Architectures for Identification and Control, April 1996.

Jacob Freedman - Adaptive Control of Groundwater Flow Using the CMAC Neural Network, April 1996.

Sheldon Haynie - Report of BCD-2 Process Development, May 1996

Karen Hein - A Theoretical and Practical Approach to Multichip Module Design, August 1995.

Brian Kirk - Performance Monitoring From the EEG Power Spectrum with a Radial Basis Function Neural Network, May 1996.

Daniel Komisarek - The Investigation and Analysis of a Liquid Crystal Switchable Kinaform Imaging System, December 1994.

Ahmed T. Nazeer - An ISO 9000-Based Quality Framework to Manage Collaborative Engineering Projects at a University Design Laboratory, June 1996.

Troy Payne - A CMAC Neural Network Approach to a High Degree of Freedom Vibration Control Problem, February 1996.

Will Sanborn - A Study of Fiducial Marks and their Detection Using Correlation Techniques, December 1995.

Joe Sebeny - Design Overview of a Pitchover Thrust Vector Control (TVC) Autopilot Utilizing Dynamic Inversion for a Vertically Launched Tactical Missile, May 1996.

Fred Sienko - Design Methodology for Analog Hardware Description Language (HDL-A), May 1995.