Teresa Meng
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Teresa Huai-Ying Meng (; born 1961) is a
Taiwanese-American Taiwanese Americans () are Americans who carry full or partial ancestry from Taiwan. This includes American-born citizens who descend from migrants from Taiwan. As of the 2010 U.S. Census, 49% of Taiwanese Americans lived in the state of Califo ...
academician and entrepreneur. She is the Reid Weaver Dennis Professor of
Electrical Engineering Electrical engineering is an engineering discipline concerned with the study, design, and application of equipment, devices, and systems which use electricity, electronics, and electromagnetism. It emerged as an identifiable occupation in the l ...
, Emerita, at
Stanford University Stanford University, officially Leland Stanford Junior University, is a private research university in Stanford, California. The campus occupies , among the largest in the United States, and enrolls over 17,000 students. Stanford is consider ...
, and founder of
Atheros Communications Qualcomm Atheros is a developer of semiconductor Integrated circuit, chips for Computer network, network communications, particularly wireless chipsets. Founded under the name T-Span Systems in 1998 by experts in signal processing and VLSI desig ...
, a wireless semiconductor company acquired by Qualcomm, Inc. In 2007, Meng was elected as a member into the
National Academy of Engineering The National Academy of Engineering (NAE) is an American nonprofit, non-governmental organization. The National Academy of Engineering is part of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, along with the National Academy ...
for pioneering the development of distributed wireless network technology.


Early life and education

Meng, born and raised in Taiwan, graduated from the
National Taiwan University National Taiwan University (NTU; ) is a public research university in Taipei, Taiwan. The university was founded in 1928 during Japanese rule as the seventh of the Imperial Universities. It was named Taihoku Imperial University and served d ...
with a bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering. She received her Ph.D. and M.S. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at the
University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California) is a public land-grant research university in Berkeley, California. Established in 1868 as the University of California, it is the state's first land-grant u ...
in 1988 and 1985, respectively. She is the daughter of Shih-Ko Meng, an industrial engineer by training, who foresaw the importance of IC technology and co-founded the first semiconductor manufacturing company in Taiwan in the 1970s. Meng's mother was an accountant.


Career

She joined the Stanford faculty in 1988. Her research activities in the first 10 years focused on low-power circuit and system design, video signal processing, and wireless communications. In 1998, Prof. Meng took leave from Stanford and founded Atheros Communications, Inc., which developed semiconductor system solutions for wireless network communications products. After returning to Stanford in 2000, Meng continued her teaching and research, and turned her research interest to applying signal processing and IC design to bio-medical engineering. She collaborated with Prof.
Krishna Shenoy Krishna V. Shenoy (1968-2023) was an American neuroscientist and neuroengineer at Stanford University. Shenoy focused on motor and computational neuroscience, neuroengineering, brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) and neurotechnology. Throughout his ...
on neural signal processing and neural prosthetic systems. She also directed a research group exploring wireless power transfer and implantable bio-medical devices. Prof. Meng retired from Stanford in 2013. She serves on the boards of Ambarella and the Alliance Cultural Foundation International and is Advisor to Atmosic Technologies. In 2019, Meng was the recipient of the IEEE Alexander Graham Bell medal. This marked the first time a female was the recipient of the award. Meng was awarded this due to her contributions and leadership in the development of wireless semiconductor technology.


Atheros Communications

In 1998, Meng took leave from her post at Stanford University to found Atheros Communications, a company which focused on technology for wireless communications. A provider of Wi-Fi technologies and solutions, Atheros went public in 2004. In 2006, Atheros partnered with mobile CDMA leader, Qualcomm, to create integrated cellular and Wi-Fi solutions, with initial application in the smartphone. The partnership culminated in the Qualcomm acquisition of Atheros in 2011. In her role as founder of Atheros, Meng was named one of Top 10 entrepreneurs of the Year by Red Herring (2001), and received the 20/20 Vision Award, CIO Magazine (2002), and Innovator of the Year, MIT Sloan Business School (2002). Meng has been credited by the IEEE for her CMOS-integrated radio-frequency innovations, which led to the availability of inexpensive wireless data communications that fueled the wireless revolution by enabling low-cost, high-performance LANs.


Boards, advisory committees, professional organizations

* Director, Ambarella, Inc. (2018–Present) * Director, Alliance Cultural Foundation International (2017–Present) * Advisor, Atmosic Technologies (2016–Present) * Academician, Academia Sinica, Taiwan (2010–Present) * Member, National Academy of Engineering (2007–Present) * Trustee, Computer Science Museum (2006–2008) * Director of CS and Telecommunication Board, National Academies (2003–2009) * Founder and Director, Atheros Communications Inc (1999–2011) * Fellow, IEEE (1998–Present)


Selected articles

; Signal Processing and Wireless Communications: * Teresa H. Meng and David G. Messerschmitt
"Arbitrarily High Sampling Rate Adaptive Filters,"
''IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing'', Vol. ASSP-34, No. 4, pp. 455–470, April 1987 (best paper award). * Teresa H. Meng, Benjamin M. Gordon, Ely K. Tsern and Andy C. Hung
"Portable Video-on-Demand in Wireless Communication,"
invited paper, ''Proceedings of IEEE'', Vol. 83, No. 4, pp. 659–680, April 1995. * Peter J. Black and Teresa H. Meng
"A 1Gb/s, 4-State, Sliding Block Viterbi Decoder,"
''IEEE Journal of Solid-States Circuits'', Vol. 32, No. 6, pp. 797–805, June 1997. * Teresa H. Meng
"Low-Power Wireless Video Systems,"
invited paper, ''IEEE Communications Magazine'', Vol. 36, No. 6, pp. 130–137, June 1998. * Won Namgoong, Sydney Reader and Teresa H. Meng
"An All-Digital Low-Power IF GPS Synchronizer,"
''IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits'', Vol. 35, No. 6, pp. 856–864, June 2000. * Jeffrey G. Andrews and Teresa H. Meng
"Performance of MC-CDMA with Successive Interference Cancellation,"
''IEEE Transactions on Communications'', Vol. 52, No. 5, pp. 811–822, May 2004. * Alok Aggarwal and Teresa H. Meng
"Minimizing the Peak-to-Average Power Ratio of OFDM Signals Using Convex Optimization,"
''IEEE Trans. on Signal Processing'', Vol. 54, No. 8, pp. 3099–3110, August 2006. * Volkan Rodoplu and Teresa H. Meng
"Bits-per-Joule Capacityof Energy-Limited Wireless Networks,"
''IEEE Trans. on Wireless Communications'', Vol. 6, No. 3, pp. 857–865, March 2007. ; Atheros Network and SoC Designs: * Bill McFarland, Greg Chesson, Carl Temme, Teresa H. Meng
"The 5-UP Protocol for Unified, Multi-Service Wireless Networks,"
invited paper, ''IEEE Communications Magazine'', pp. 84–92, November 2002. * Teresa H. Meng, Bill McFarland, David Su, John Thomso
"Design and Implementation of an ALL-CMOS 802.11a Wireless LAN Chipset,"
invited paper, ''IEEE Communications Magazine'', Vol. 41, No. 8, pp. 160–168, August 2003. * Srenik Mehta, D. Weber, M. Terrovitis, K. Onodera, M. Mack, B. Kaczynki, H. Samavati, S. Jen, W. Si, M. Lee, K. Singh, S. Mendis, P. Husted, N. Zhang, B. McFarland, D. Su, T. Meng, and B. Wooley
"An 802.11g WLAN SoC"
''IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits'', Vol. 40, No. 12, pp. 2483–2491, December 2005. ; Neural Signal Processing: * Caleb Kemere, Krishna Shenoy and Teresa H. Meng
"Model-Based Neural Decoding of Reaching Movements: A Maximum Likelihood Approach,"
''IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering'', Vol. 51, No. 6, pp. 925–932, June 2004. * Gopal Santhanam, Michael D. Linderman, Vikash Gilja, Afsheen Afshar, Stephen Ryu, Teresa H. Meng, Krishna V. Shenoy
"HermesB: A Continuous Neural Recording System for Freely Behaving Primates,"
''Transactions on Biomedical Engineering'', Vol. 54, No. 11, pp. 2037–2050, November 2007. * Michael D. Linderman. Caleb T. Kemere, Stephen O'Driscoll, Gopal Santhanam, Vikash Gilja, Byron M. Yu, Afsheen Afshar, Stephen I. Ryu, Teresa H. Meng, Krishna V. Shenoy
"Signal Processing Challenges for Neural Prostheses,"
''IEEE Signal Processing Magazine'', Vol. 25, No. 1, pp. 18–28, January 2008. * Henrique Miranda, Vikash Gilja, Cindy Chestek, Krishna Shenoy, Teresa H. Meng
"HermesD: A High-rate Long-range Wireless Transmission System for Simultaneous Multichannel Neural Recording Applications"
''IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems'', Vol. 4, No. 3, pp. 181–191, June 2010. * Hua Goa, Ross Walker, Teresa Meng, and Boris Meuman
"HermesE: A 96-Channel Full Data Rate Direct Neural Interface in 0.13 ''u''m CMOS"
''IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits'', 2012. ; Wireless Power Transfer: * Stephen O'Driscoll, Ada Poon, and Teresa H. Meng
"A ''mm''-sized Implantable Power Receiver with Adaptive Link Compensation"
''Technical Digest of 2009 IEEE Inter. Solid-State Circuits Conference'', February 2009. * Stephen O'Driscoll and Teresa H. Meng
"Adaptive Signal Acquisition and Wireless Power Transfer for an Implantable Prosthesis Processor"
''Proc. of IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems'', pp. 3589–3592, Paris, France, June 2010 (Invited) ; Implantable Biomedical Devices: * Daniel Pivonka, Ada Poon, and Teresa H. Meng
"Locomotive Micro-Implant with Active Electromagnetic Propulsion"
''IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society Conference, EMBS'', Minneapolis, MN, pp. 6404–6407, September 2009. * Daniel Pivonka, Anatoly Yakovlev, Ada Poon, and Teresa H. Meng
"A ''mm''-sized Wirelessly Powered and Remotely Controlled Locomotive Implant,"
''IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems'', 2012.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Meng, Teresa H. 1961 births American academics of Taiwanese descent American women academics Stanford University School of Engineering faculty National Taiwan University alumni UC Berkeley College of Engineering alumni Taiwanese emigrants to the United States Living people Members of the United States National Academy of Engineering Businesspeople from the San Francisco Bay Area Taiwanese company founders Technology company founders American women company founders American company founders 20th-century Taiwanese businesspeople 21st-century Taiwanese businesspeople 20th-century American businesspeople 21st-century American businesspeople 20th-century American businesswomen 21st-century American businesswomen Taiwanese women company founders