Discover New Innovations at Invented at Duke 2025
Professors David Smith, Xiaoyue Ni and Ken Gall are among those who will share tech being spun out of their labs at the annual event.
Li is the fourth faculty member in Duke’s Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering to capture the prestigious award.
Hai “Helen” Li, the Marie Foote Reel E’46 Distinguished Professor of Electrical & Computer Engineering and chair of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE), has won the 2025 Edward J. McCluskey Technical Achievement Award for her work in neuromorphic computing and deep-learning acceleration.
The award is given by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Computer Society for outstanding and innovative contributions to the fields of computer and information science and engineering or computer technology.
A world-renowned scholar working across hardware and software applications in the development of next-generation computing machinery, Li pursues broad research interests in hardware and software co-design to bridge the gap between the hardware and deep learning communities. Rather than building general processors not optimized for any specific task, co-design puts hardware engineers and software designers together to create new architectures tailored to fulfill specific needs. Depending on the task at hand, for example, this could make the operation simpler and more power-efficient or give it more power and higher performance.
She is known for her pioneering research in neuromorphic computing systems—next-generation computer hardware designs based on the human brain. A leader in her field, Li possesses a deep knowledge of machine learning techniques and applications. She and her students have won numerous awards and recognitions, including nine best-paper awards.
Li joins Yiran Chen (2022), Krishnendu Chakrabarty (2015) and Kishor Trivedi (2008) as previous winners of the award from Duke ECE.
Professors David Smith, Xiaoyue Ni and Ken Gall are among those who will share tech being spun out of their labs at the annual event.
Researchers build an “agentic system” of large language models that can solve complex design problems in a fraction of the time of skilled experts.
Capillary flow printing enables Aaron Franklin and his lab to print features less than a millionth of a meter for thin-film transistors.