Department Faculty
Our faculty are renowned leaders in their respective fields, extraordinary teachers, and dedicated mentors.
Home to world-class teaching and interdisciplinary research, the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering prides itself on immersive education, creative problem-solving, and close mentorship, with emphasis on devices, system engineering, signal processing and machine learning.
Apply to the undergraduate program or graduate program today.
Vanderbilt researchers have developed a way to more quickly, and precisely, trap nanoscale objects such as potentially cancerous extracellular vesicles using a cutting-edge plasmonic nanotweezer.
The Electrical and Computer Engineering Department
The Electrical and Computer Engineering Department
Shekhar Bhansali
Chair and Cornelius Vanderbilt Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Vanderbilt University School of Engineering
A shared passion for research and education is a hallmark of the Vanderbilt environment, and our undergraduate and graduate programs exemplify that drive for excellence. Faculty, research engineers and students engage in leading scholarship and significant research in both industry and government.
Our faculty are renowned leaders in their respective fields, extraordinary teachers, and dedicated mentors.
Electrical and computer engineering graduate students pursuing M.S. and Ph.D. degrees work with our accomplished faculty on high-impact research projects while gaining experience in specialized areas of interest. Focus areas include carbon, diamond and silicon nanotechnology, hybrid and embedded systems, medical image processing, photonics, radiation effects and reliability and robotics.
We offer an accredited electrical and computer engineering undergraduate major, a double-major in electrical and computer engineering and biomedical engineering, and a minor in electrical and computer engineering.
The immersive Senior Design Project brings together interdisciplinary teams of engineers to solve cutting-edge problems. Prior teams have gone on to start companies, lead to new industry products, and kickstart research careers. Summer research opportunities are also available in collaboration with the School of Engineering and the VUSE Undergraduate Summer Research Program. Additional opportunities are available in the NSF Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) programs.
The curriculum of the Electrical and Computer Engineering major is multifaceted. It provides a broad foundation in mathematics, physics, and computer science and a traditional background in circuit analysis, digital systems, and electronics. Several exciting areas of concentration are available, including photonics, nanomaterials, microelectronics, embedded systems, cyber-physical systems, signal processing, and medical imaging. The ECE major can be combined with several other programs as a double major, including biomedical engineering, physics, and mathematics. Students receive an education that prepares them for diverse careers in industry, government, law, medicine, and postgraduate education.
The double major between Electrical and Computer Engineering and Biomedical Engineering is a strategic combination of the broad foundations of Biomedical Engineering with the in-depth preparation of Electrical and Computer Engineering. It is an ideal background for those interested in pursuing careers in instrumentation or the blending of computer technology with biomedical applications (e.g., medical informatics, imaging), as well as careers in research that are directed at the solution of biomedically-oriented problems or health care delivery. The similarity of the two curricula is leveraged so that the double major may be achieved with only six additional course hours beyond the standard load, at the cost of some flexibility in the selection of elective courses.
While some anticipation of the additional course load is advised by taking extra classes in the freshman year, it is often not necessary for those with AP credit. In general the ECE/BME double major can be adopted as late as the sophomore year.
Minoring in Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) equips students with essential cross-disciplinary knowledge in circuits, digital systems, and programming. It also offers a diverse selection of ECE electives in areas such as photonics, nanomaterials, microelectronics, embedded systems, cyber-physical systems, medical imaging, and signal processing. In today's technology-driven world, where computers and electronics are integral to everything from spacecraft to home appliances, an ECE minor enhances coursework across the entire School of Engineering. It provides students with the tools to apply their disciplines more effectively to real-world challenges in manufacturing, economics, transportation, construction, aerospace, energy production, and environmental safety.
Shekhar Bhansali, Chair
Tim Holman, Director of Undergraduate Studies
Alan Peters, Director of Graduate Studies
Jack Noble, Director of Graduate Recruiting
Department Administration Staff
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Vanderbilt University
PMB 351824
2301 Vanderbilt Place
Nashville, TN 37235-1824