Generated by GPT-5-mini| IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems | |
|---|---|
| Title | IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems |
| Discipline | Electrical engineering; Signal processing; Control theory |
| Abbreviation | IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. |
| Publisher | Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers |
| Country | United States |
| History | 1954–present |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| Issn | 0098-4094 |
IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems is a peer-reviewed scientific journal published by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers that covers research in analog and digital electronics, integrated circuits, signal processing, and control theory. Established in the mid-20th century, the journal has served as a venue for work by researchers affiliated with institutions such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, California Institute of Technology, University of California, Berkeley, and University of Cambridge. Submissions often originate from laboratories at Bell Labs, IBM Research, Microsoft Research, Hewlett-Packard, and national laboratories including Sandia National Laboratories and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
The journal traces roots to post-World War II developments in electrical engineering and was influenced by advances from figures at Bell Telephone Laboratories and events such as the rise of transistor research at University of Pennsylvania, the founding of Fairchild Semiconductor, and programs at DARPA. Early editors included practitioners linked to National Bureau of Standards and faculty from Princeton University and Columbia University. Over decades the journal documented milestones associated with the work of inventors like William Shockley, John Bardeen, and Walter Brattain and engineers at firms such as Texas Instruments and Intel. The publication evolved alongside conferences organized by the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society and major meetings like the International Solid-State Circuits Conference and the Design Automation Conference.
The journal's remit encompasses design, analysis, modeling, and implementation of circuits and systems as practiced at institutions such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, Imperial College London, and Tsinghua University. Topics include analog circuits linked to work from Texas Instruments and Analog Devices, digital and mixed-signal design reflecting efforts at Intel Corporation and ARM Holdings, as well as networked systems informed by research at ETH Zurich and EPFL. It invites manuscripts addressing methodologies tied to the legacies of scholars like Hendrik Bode, Harry Nyquist, Norbert Wiener, and Claude Shannon, and applications relevant to industries including Nokia, Ericsson, Siemens, and General Electric.
The editorial board has historically included editors and associate editors from universities such as University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign, Georgia Institute of Technology, University of Michigan, Tokyo Institute of Technology, and Seoul National University. Peer review practices align with standards promoted by professional bodies like the American National Standards Institute and the International Organization for Standardization. Special issues have been guest-edited by researchers associated with projects funded by agencies including National Science Foundation, European Research Council, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, and Korea Research Foundation. The publication schedule and digital archiving involve partnerships with repositories and platforms maintained by IEEE Xplore Digital Library and library systems at institutions such as Library of Congress and British Library.
The journal is indexed in major services including Scopus, Web of Science, EI Compendex, and Google Scholar. It appears in citation databases curated by entities like Clarivate Analytics and is tracked for metrics used by universities such as Harvard University, University of Oxford, and Yale University. Abstracting coverage supports discovery via aggregators used by research libraries at Columbia University, University of Toronto, University of Melbourne, and National University of Singapore.
Published articles have reported influential results tied to circuit realizations of theories from Claude Shannon and Norbert Wiener, including demonstrations analogous to the transistor amplifications advanced by William Shockley and digital logic architectures paralleling work at Intel Corporation. Landmark contributions include advancements in low-power design used by ARM Holdings and NVIDIA Corporation, mixed-signal integrated circuit techniques impacting products by Analog Devices and Maxim Integrated, and algorithm-hardware co-design approaches informed by collaborations involving Google Research and Facebook AI Research. The journal has hosted papers that intersect with standards and technologies developed by 3GPP, IEEE 802.11, ITU-T, and ETSI.
The publication is cited in the work of awardees of honors such as the IEEE Medal of Honor, the Turing Award, and the Kyoto Prize, and has been referenced in textbooks authored by academics at MIT Press, Cambridge University Press, and Springer Science+Business Media. Universities and corporate research labs including Bell Labs, Microsoft Research, IBM Research, Toyota Research Institute, and Bosch Research regard it as a reputable venue. Its influence is reflected in citation analyses conducted by Clarivate Analytics and rankings used by agencies such as Times Higher Education and QS World University Rankings.
Category:IEEE academic journals