Summary
Maziar Ghorbani is an Associate Lecturer and researcher in Computer Science with nine years’ experience focused on high-performance distributed computing and hardware-accelerated systems. His work bridges academia and large-scale experimental physics, including a PhD-backed stint at CERN where he automated translation of algorithmic descriptions into FPGA/ASIC designs for the CMS track-finding upgrade. At Brunel University he has progressed from postdoc to research fellow to teaching, delivering distributed simulation platforms and mentoring students in practical, performance-critical systems. He combines deep microelectronics and system-level expertise (MSc in Microelectronic System Design) with hands-on research in simulation and hardware-software co-design, making him adept at turning complex algorithms into deployable, high-throughput implementations. An understated strength is his ability to move between low-level hardware optimization and higher-level distributed architectures, ensuring research leads to reproducible, scalable outcomes.
9 years of coding experience
3 years of employment as a software developer
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Res Electronic and Electrical Engineering, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Res Electronic and Electrical Engineering at Brunel University London
Master of Science (M.Sc.), Microelectronic System Design, Master of Science (M.Sc.), Microelectronic System Design at University of Westminster