Advance your academic career, collaborate globally, and expand your network— join now !

Due to scheduled maintenance work on our database systems, there may be short service disruptions on this website between 10:00 and 11:00 CEST on June 14th.

Dr. Jose-Maria Guerrero-Rodriguez

Area de Electronica,  University of Cádiz

Share Link

Share

Information

José María Guerrero-Rodríguez received the B.Sc. degree in electronic engineering from the University of Cádiz, Spain, in 1987, the B.Sc. degree in physics, specialized in electronics, from UNED University, Madrid, Spain, in 1999, and the Ph.D. degree in industrial electronics from the University of Cádiz in 2009. He was with several electronic sector companies (telecommunications and hard disk drive manufacturing) as a Test-Engineer and R&D Engineer. He joined the Department of Systems Engineering and Electronics, Engineering School, University of Cádiz, as Assistant Professor of Electronics in 1997 and Associate Professor since 2004, in Electronics and Electronic Instrumentation. His research is focused on electronic instrumentation, sensor devices, AI techniques application on Intelligent Instrumentation, and low-level sensors signal processing. Also, he is working on other interest areas as analog design and embedded systems programming.

Research Keywords & Expertise

Intelligent Sensors
Microcontroller and Em...
Electronic analog devi...
Sensors and Actuatator...
Bioinspired

Short Biography

José María Guerrero-Rodríguez received the B.Sc. degree in electronic engineering from the University of Cádiz, Spain, in 1987, the B.Sc. degree in physics, specialized in electronics, from UNED University, Madrid, Spain, in 1999, and the Ph.D. degree in industrial electronics from the University of Cádiz in 2009. He was with several electronic sector companies (telecommunications and hard disk drive manufacturing) as a Test-Engineer and R&D Engineer. He joined the Department of Systems Engineering and Electronics, Engineering School, University of Cádiz, as Assistant Professor of Electronics in 1997 and Associate Professor since 2004, in Electronics and Electronic Instrumentation. His research is focused on electronic instrumentation, sensor devices, AI techniques application on Intelligent Instrumentation, and low-level sensors signal processing. Also, he is working on other interest areas as analog design and embedded systems programming.