People
Ron
Cottam
Willy Ranson
Roger Vounckx
Hichem Sahli
Mariela Atanassova
Nils
Langloh
Ron Cottam
Ron received his first degree and
PhD in Applied Physics from the University of Durham,
UK. He transferred to the Department of Metallurgy at
the University of Leuven, Belgium in 1971, and later
joined the Department of Electronics and Information
Processing of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel in 1983.
Since 1984 he has been a member of the Laboratory of
Micro- and Photonelectronics (LAMI) in the VUB, associated with
work on chemical sensors, optical computing,
computational theory, and most recently since 1991 on
the development of hierarchical architectures for the
implementation of lifelike processes in ULSI beyond
2020. Ron leads the VUB Living Systems
Group (LIFE), and has authored and co-authored papers on
solid-state physics, ultrasonic techniques,
computational emergence, natural semiotics, hierarchical
evolutionary systems, complexity and anticipatory
computation, and has contributed to international
conferences, journals and books. He teaches electronics
and intelligent design in Vesalius College of the VUB
since 1990, and is a member of the Board of Governors of
the Institute for Semiosis, Evolution and Energy of the
University of Toronto.
Willy Ranson
Willy received the Telecommunication Engineer degree in 1975 from the
University of Leuven, Belgium. He was Assistant
Professor in the Department of Microwaves and Lasers at
the University of Leuven until 1983, when he joined the
Department of Electronics and Informatics of
the Vrije Universiteit Brussel. Since 1990 he has been a
member of the Laboratory of Micro- and Photonelectronics
(LAMI) in the VUB. Willy has participated in projects and
contracted research on such diverse topics as planar
antenna structures, high frequency wave-guides, chemical
sensors, biological applications for breast cancer
detection, optical information processing for parallel
computation, CO2 laser applications, microelectronic
process technology and revolutionary information and
computation theories. He is currently Senior Researcher
in charge of the processing technology lab of LAMI and
is a founder member of LIFE. His current research
contributions are in the areas of CO2 laser modulation,
millimeter imaging systems, micro machines for
ultra-rapid DNA screening, fast enforcing technologies
for protein engineering and evolutionary computation. He
is (co) author of more than 135 publications in
international refereed journals and conferences.
Roger Vounckx
Roger A. Vounckx received
the lic. in physics degree from the University of
Brussels (VUB) in 1975. He was a teaching assistant in
the Physics Department of that university’s Faculty of
Sciences until 1980 (military service 1978-1979). His
research interests during that period included surface
properties of silicon, charge coupled devices (CCDs) and
tunneling mechanisms in dielectrics for non-volatile
memory applications. In 1981 and 1982 he was a visiting
scientist and acted as a consultant for AT&T Bell
Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey (USA), working on
exploratory high speed III-V semiconductor transistors.
In autumn 1982 he started doctoral work in the
Electronics Department of the VUB on III-V transistors
and received the Dr.Sc. degree in physics with highest
honours in 1984 with a dissertation on the effects of
ohmic contact formation on the performance of high
electron mobility transistors (HEMTs). He was appointed
associate professor of microelectronics at the VUB in
1984 and full professor in 1993. He became director of
the Laboratory of Micro- and Photonelectronics (LAMI) in
1987. His current research interests
include semiconductor devices and systems for optical
and electrical information processing and communication
and mm wave imaging systems. He published around 250
technical papers in international journals and
conference proceedings and holds 6 international
patents. He served as a chairman and member of program
committees for international conferences and as a
reviewer for international scientific journals. He is a
member of the Physics Commission of the Belgian National
Science Fund (FWO-V) and serves regularly as an expert
for evaluation of industrial research projects for the
Belgian Government. His laboratory is involved in
several national and European research consortia. He is currently heading an impulse
program from the Brussels region about Q-switched CO2
lasers and equalizing techniques for fast data
communication and a “Strategic Basic Research” Program
from the Flemish government for mm wave imaging
applications.