Guy Eichler
Research
Guy works at the intersection of hardware and software for implantable brain–computer interfaces (BCIs), with current projects focused on CMOS-based systems that combine large-scale neural data acquisition, low-power wireless communication, and embedded AI-based neural decoding. His research includes the design of specialized AI hardware accelerators, custom microcontrollers for implantable and wearable devices, and heterogeneous SoC architectures optimized for real-time neural decoding under strict power and throughput constraints. He has architected and implemented heterogeneous SoC designs for both FPGA prototypes and ASIC tapeouts, using RTL design, high-level synthesis (HLS), and embedded RISC-V processors, and has contributed to in-vivo experiments with implantable BCIs in animal models. His current work continues to advance the design of next-generation implantable BCIs.
Education
B.Sc. in Electrical Engineering, Technion – Israel’s Institute of Technology
M.Sc. in Computer Science, Columbia University
M.PHil in Computer Science, Columbia University
Ph.D. in Computer Science, Columbia University


