15th EECS Research Students Symposium (EECS 2024)

The 15th EECS Research Students Symposium (EECS 2024) was held during 4–5 April 2024 at IISc. This symposium is an initiative of the Division of Electrical, Electronics, and Computer Sciences (EECS) at IISc. This annual event is organised by six departments/centres from IISc, namely, the departments of Computational and Data Sciences (CDS), Computer Science and Automation (CSA), Electrical Communication Engineering (ECE), Electrical Engineering (EE), Electronic Systems Engineering (ESE), and the Robert Bosch Centre for Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS).

The Symposium is primarily a forum for senior research students to present their work and receive feedback from an audience of students and faculty members from IISc, other academicians and industry participants. This year’s programme featured students presentations under 11 research clusters, namely Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning; Microelectronics, RF, and Photonics; Signal Processing and Communications; Computer Systems, Security, and Privacy; Visual Analytics; Theoretical Computer Science; Brain, Computation, and Data Sciences; Computer Systems; Cyber-Physical Systems; Power Engineering; and Networking and IoT. Best student presentation awards were presented in each of these research clusters.

There were three plenary talks by eminent speakers. Kavitha Telikepalli (Professor, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research) spoke on ‘Matchings and Popularity’, Faruk Kazi (Professor, Veermata Jijabai Technological Institute) on ‘Cybersecurity of Critical Infrastructures: Challenges & Way Forward’, and Kaushik Roy (Professor, Purdue University) on ‘Rethinking Computing with Neuro-Inspired Learning’.

Young faculty members of IISc from the six organising departments also gave talks. Ravi Prakash (Assistant Professor, CPS) spoke on ‘Generalization of Task Parameterized Interactive Imitation Learning’, Chaya Ganesh (Assistant Professor, CSA) on ‘Dodging Bullets: SNARK Impossibilities and How to Avoid Them’, Danish Pruthi (Assistant Professor, CDS) on ‘Can ChatGPT Challenge False Assumptions?’, Kiran Kumari (Assistant Professor, EE) on ‘Sliding Mode Control for Quadcopter in Presence of Disturbances’, Sudhan Majhi (Assistant Professor, ECE) on ‘Channel Estimator and Symbol Detector for OTFS Systems Impaired by Impulsive Noise’, and Debayan Das (Assistant Professor, ESE) on ‘Overview of Hardware Security & Internet of Bodies’.