Vinith Misra
Stanford University
21 Papers
190 Citations
Vinith Misra is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Quantization (signal processing) & Micropower. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 21 publications. Previous affiliations of Vinith Misra include IBM & Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Papers
High-temperature ferromagnetism in Zn1−xMnxO semiconductor thin films
Nikoleta Theodoropoulou,Vinith Misra,John Philip,Patrick LeClair,Geetha P. Berera,Jagadeesh S. Moodera,Biswarup Satpati,Tapobrata Som +7 more
TL;DR: The magnetic properties depended on the exact Mn concentration and the growth parameters, and the magnetic moment is 4.8 μ B /Mn at 350 K, the highest moment yet reported for any Mn doped magnetic semiconductor as mentioned in this paper.
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Patent
Cognitive operations based on empirically constructed knowledge graphs
Luis A. Lastras-Montano,Vinith Misra,Livio Soares +2 more
- 16 Sep 2015
TL;DR: In this paper, a set of nodes in the original graph data structure having a predetermined pattern of activity in the activity log information was identified and the set of edges between these nodes was calculated.
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Distributed Functional Scalar Quantization Simplified
TL;DR: It is shown that a much simpler decoder has equivalent asymptotic performance to the conditional expectation estimator studied previously, thus reducing decoder design complexity and extending the DFSQ framework with the simpler decode to source distributions with unbounded support.
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The Porosity of Additive Noise Sequences
Vinith Misra,Tsachy Weissman +1 more
TL;DR: A sequence of schemes are presented that universally achieve porosity for any noise sequence, which may be interpreted both as a channel-coding counterpart to Ziv and Lempel's work in universal source coding, as well as an extension of the work by Lomnitzer and Feder and Shayevitz and Feder on communication across modulo-additive channels.
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Ultra-low-power electronics for non-invasive medical monitoring
Lorenzo Turicchia,Soumyajit Mandal,Maziar Tavakoli,L. Fay,Vinith Misra,Jose L. Bohorquez,William R. Sanchez,R. Sarpeshkar +7 more
- 09 Oct 2009
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present several methods for reducing power consumption while retaining precision for non-invasive medical monitoring, including a micropower electrocardiograph, an ultra-low-power pulse oximeter, a phonocardiograph and an integrated-circuit switched-capacitor model of the heart.