Artifact Details

Title

Boahen, Kwabena oral history

Catalog Number

102792242

Type

Document

Description

Mr. Boahen is a professor of Bioengineering and Electrical Engineering at Stanford University. He was born in 1964 in Ghana. His father was a professor of history at the University of Ghana and a very humble man. He wanted his children to be the same.

As a child, Kwabena always enjoyed building and experimenting with things such as microscopes and electric motors. His parents were from different groups within the country and spoke different languages. As a result, the common language in the family home was English. He went off to a boarding school founded by Methodist Missionaries when he was 12. While there he won a national science fair competition for a corn planting machine which he and a friend had developed.

His father has spent a sabbatical at Johns Hopkins University and that opened up the opportunity for Kwabena to study there. While there, he was introduced to how the brain worked and the concept that neural networks represented an alternative approach to computing. He took a course in VLSI design in his junior year and designed an analog approach to neuromorphic computing. He was using course notes and ideas coming from Carver Mead’s class at Caltech.

These studies eventually led to his attending Caltech for graduate school where he earned a PhD under Carver Mead. He entered in 1990 and received his degree in 1996. His focus remained on neuromorphic computing…using an understanding of the human brain to develop more efficient computing elements. The target application was a silicon retina. Kwabena goes into great detail describing his research work and combining learning from the computing and biology domains.

After earning his PhD, he became a professor at the University of Pennsylvania in 1997. In 2005 he left to join Stanford where he was at the time of the interview. At Stanford he directs Stanford’s Brains in Silicon Lab where he continues his work on melding the worlds of brains, biology and silicon.

Date

2021-06-22

Contributor

Boahen, Kwabena, Interviewee
Fairbairn, Doug, Interviewer

Publisher

Computer History Museum

Place of Publication

Mountain View, CA

Extent

35 p.

Format

PDF

Category

Transcription

Subject

Ghana; Johns Hopkins University; Mead, Carver; Andreou, Andreas; Neuromorphic computing; artificial intelligence; silicon retina; Caltech; Feynman, Richard

Collection Title

CHM Oral History Collection

Credit

Computer History Museum

Lot Number

X9493.2021

Related Records

102792243 Boahen, Kwabena oral history