Wireless, information, and networked systems constitute the core infrastructure of the 21st century. Wireless research at Princeton ranges across the “full stack” — from the enabling circuits and systems to platforms and applications, and across the end-to-end flows of data from wearable and mobile devices at the edge to networked systems. The work is highly interdisciplinary, spanning theory and practice and encompassing cross-cutting themes such as security, privacy, and resilience, as well as the ability of next-generation networks to improve fairness and bridge the digital divide.

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News

  • Graduate student Kun Woo Cho working on hardware in a Princeton lab.

    Celebrating Women’s History Month with stories of resilience and reinvention

  • Portrait.

    Goldsmith, pioneer in mobile technology, named to National Inventors Hall of Fame

  • event organizers talk in dynamic business conversation with projector screen in background

    Princeton researchers, industry leaders drive new era of innovation in wireless and networking technologies

  • Persimmons and apples duct-taped to a Styrofoam platform in an ordered array.

    The world has a food-waste problem. Can this wireless tech help fix it?

  • Foam board with a pinned grasshopper specimen, with wings extended, and four rows with different colors and shapes of synthetic wings under investigation for flying robots.

    Innovation funds support research in robotics, machine learning, climate resilience and more

  • Princeton selected to lead NSF-funded regional consortium for photonics research and workforce development

Events

  • May 01

    9:00 am

    Annual Princeton NextG Symposium