A head shot of Chris Rodgers

Dr. Chris Rodgers (he) is an Assistant Professor at Emory, and head of the PAC Lab.

Chris grew up in Kentucky and was exposed to science and engineering from an early age by his mother, a laboratory veterinarian, and his father, an electrical engineer. Chris attended the Math and Science Technology Center, a magnet program at his local public high school, Paul Laurence Dunbar High School (named after the Black poet).

Chris majored in electrical engineering at McGill University in Montréal, where he received the James McGill Award, and he received his PhD in neuroscience from the University of California, Berkeley. At Columbia University, he was a Ruth L. Kirschstein postdoctoral fellow and received a Young Investigator Award from the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation. After completing this training, he began a new position at Emory University as head of the Perception and Action Lab and as Assistant Professor in the Department of Neurosurgery, with additional affiliations in the Departments of Cell Biology, Biology, and Biomedical Engineering.

The scientific question that motivates Chris is: how do computations in the brain enable networks of neurons to process information and control the body? Understanding how these computations change in brain disorders could enable us to engineer better therapies and rehabilitation strategies.

Outside the lab, Chris enjoys reading (mostly nonfiction) and brewing beer (mostly red ales). He also runs sometimes, but mostly because it’s good for him, not because he enjoys it all that much.

 

You can learn more about Chris on Google Scholar, mastodon, twitter, or LinkedIn, or by scrolling down for his complete CV.

Previous research from Chris

Sensing shape with whiskers

A three panel image. First, a mouse discriminating shapes with tracked whiskers. Second, a schematic of a recording electrode in barrel cortex. Third, the firing of an example neuron in response to whisker motion and contacts.

For his postdoctoral research, Chris studied how mice recognize objects of different shape using their whiskers. Mouse whiskers might seem like an unusual place to start, but mice actually use their whiskers almost like humans use their fingertips—they brush them along objects, and put together the information from each one in order to identify objects.

Chris found that mice actually compare information coming in from each whisker to identify the shapes. Meanwhile, the mouse’s brain precisely encoded whisker motion and touches. Surprisingly, neurons changed which whisker they responded to when mice were discriminating shapes, but not when they were doing simpler tasks.

This shows how the brain can build specialized representations of the world that are tailored to accomplishing specific tasks. Read more in the publication at Neuron, or the original open-access preprint on bioRxiv.

If you want to hear how Chris thinks and talks about this work, check out this video, which is a 5-minute presentation he gave at the Cosyne conference in 2021.

You can also watch a longer 15 minute presentation at the Neuromatch conference, or read a very short summary on Twitter. The Zuckerman Institute at Columbia also wrote an article about this work.

Chris was supported in this research by the Kavli Institute for Brain Science, the National Institute for Neurological Disorders and Stroke, and the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation.

Paying attention to sound

For his PhD at Berkeley, Chris asked how the brain can solve the “cocktail party problem” — that is, how you can pay attention to the voice of a single person even when many others are speaking at the same time. Picking out one voice like that is actually pretty challenging, both for voice recognition devices (like Siri) and for people with hearing loss or Alzheimer’s.

To study this, Chris trained rats to pay attention to one sound while ignoring others, and recorded activity in the auditory cortex, which processes sound, and the prefrontal cortex, which directs attention. Neurons in both areas changed their activity, but in a surprising way — they actually anticipated and predicted which sound the rat would respond to.

This study presented a model of how the brain can be dynamically reconfigured to route important information. You can read about it in the journal Neuron.

In this video abstract, Chris describes the results in a non-technical way. Thanks to Anita Devineni for producing this video!

You can also read an elegant “Preview” piece in Neuron from Onyekachi Odoemene and Anne Churchland that summarizes the results and places them in a broader context.

Open-access science

Progress in science depends on sharing our work, as transparently, freely, and broadly as possible. It’s also the right thing to do, because those of us who have benefited from first-world resources and funding for our experiments should share our results with people who lack those resources but can even so make valuable contributions through analyzing and modeling data.

The data and code for all of Chris’ work is linked above, right next to where it’s described. Chris has also contributed to open-source data analysis tools developed by others. pyglmnet is a package for fitting generalized linear models (GLMs) to data, especially neural data (read the article; see the code). autopilot is a package for running behavioral control systems (read the article; see the code). OpenElectrophy is a package for reading, writing, and analyzing neural data (read the article; see the code). Please note that Chris is a team contributor, not the primary developer, of these packages.

Chris’ Complete CV

Download as PDF

Assistant Professor
Department of Neurosurgery
Emory University School of Medicine
Atlanta, Georgia

Positions

Assistant Professor (2022 - present)

Department of Neurosurgery, Emory University School of Medicine
Department of Cell Biology, Emory Unversity School of Medicine (secondary appointment)
Department of Biology, Emory College of Arts and Sciences (courtesy appointment)
Program Faculty, Neuroscience Graduate Program, Emory University
Program Faculty and Adjunct Professor, Biomedical Engineering Graduate Program, Emory & Georgia Tech
Program Faculty, Bioengineering Graduate Program, Georgia Tech
Program Faculty, Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology Undergraduate Program, Emory

Selected Presentation: GTNeuro seminar series, Georgia Tech

Postdoctoral Fellow & Associate Research Scientist (2014 - 2021)

Columbia University, Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute

Education

PhD, University of California, Berkeley (2007 - 2013)

PhD, Neuroscience.
Designated Emphasis in Computational Science and Engineering
Thesis: Rule-encoding neurons in prefrontal and auditory cortex of rats performing a task similar to the cocktail party problem

BEng, McGill University (2004 - 2007)

Bachelor’s of Engineering, Electrical Engineering, with Great Distinction
Honors Thesis: The neuron modeled as a delta-sigma analog-to-digital converter
Honors: James McGill Award, British Association Medal

Purdue University (2002 - 2004)

Major: Electrical Engineering
Transferred course credit to McGill University in 2004.

Publications

Preprints and manuscripts

Park JM, Hong YK*, Rodgers CC*, Dahan JB, Schmidt ERE, Bruno RM. Deep and superficial layers of the primary somatosensory cortex are critical for whisker-based texture discrimination in mice. bioRxiv (2020), and submitted for peer review.
* equal contribution

Published peer-reviewed papers

Mai J, Gargiullo R, Zheng M, Esho V, Hussein OE, Pollay E, Bowe C, Williamson LM, McElroy AF, Saunders JL, Goolsby WN, Brooks KA, Rodgers CC (2024). Sound-seeking before and after hearing loss in mice. Scientific Reports 14(1):19181 (2024). Original preprint: bioRxiv (2024).


Barbosa J, Proville R, Rodgers CC, DeWeese MR, Ostojic S, Boubenec Y. Flexible selection of task-relevant features through population gating. Nature Communications (2023). Original preprint: bioRxiv (2022).

Nogueira R, Rodgers CC, Bruno RM, Fusi S. The geometry of cortical representations of touch in rodents. Available online ahead of print at Nature Neuroscience (2023). Original preprint:  bioRxiv (2021).

A “Research Highlight” article highlighted this work:
Rogers J. Flexible and generalizable representations of touch. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 24:132 (2023).


Rodgers CC
. A detailed behavioral, videographic, and neural dataset on object recognition in mice. Scientific Data 9:620 (2022). Original preprint: bioRxiv (2021).

Schmidt ERE, Zhao HT, Park JM, Dipoppa M, Monsalve-Mercado MM, Dahan JB, Rodgers CC, Lejeune A, Hillman EMC, Miller KD, Bruno RM, Polleux F. A human-specific modifier of cortical connectivity and circuit function. Nature 599:7886 (2021). Preprint available at bioRxiv (2020).

Rodgers CC†, Nogueira R, Pil BC, Greeman EA, Park JM, Hong YK, Fusi S, Bruno RM†. Sensorimotor strategies and neuronal representations for shape discrimination. Neuron 109 (2021). Preprint available at bioRxiv (2020).
† co-corresponding author

Jas M, Achakulvisut T, Idrizović A, Acuna D, Antalek M, Marques V, Odland T, Garg RP, Agrawal M, Umegaki Y, Foley P, Fernandes H, Harris D, Li B, Pieters O, Otterson S, De Toni G, Rodgers C, Dyer E, Hamalainen M, Kording K, Ramkumar P. Pyglmnet: Python implementation of elastic-net regularized generalized linear models. J Open Source Software 5:47 (2020).

Insanally M, Carcea I, Field R, Rodgers CC, DePasquale B, Rajan K, DeWeese M, Albanna B, Froemke RC. Spike-timing-dependent ensemble encoding by non-classically responsive cortical neurons. eLife 8:e42409 (2019).

Hong YK, Lacefield CO, Rodgers CC, Bruno RM. Sensation, movement and learning in the absence of barrel cortex. Nature 561:7724 (2018).

Sohl-Dickstein J, Teng S, Gaub BM, Rodgers CC, Li C, DeWeese MR, Harper NS. A device for human ultrasonic echolocation. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering 62:6 (2015).

Featured in Popular Science (February 9th, 2015).


Rodgers CC
† and DeWeese MR. Neural correlates of task switching in prefrontal cortex and primary auditory cortex in a novel stimulus selection task for rodents. Neuron 82:5 (2014).
† corresponding author

A “Preview” article highlighted this work: Odoemene O and Churchland AK. Listening for the right sounds. Neuron 82:5 (2014).


Garcia S, Guarino D, Jaillet F, Jennings T, Propper R, Rautenberg PL, Rodgers CC, Sobolev A, Wachtler T, Yger P, Davison AP. Neo: an object model for handling electrophysiology data in multiple formats. Frontiers in Neuroinformatics 8:10 (2014).

Invited articles

Rodgers CC, Albanna BF, Insanally MN. Decisions, decisions: Making sense of non-sensory neurons. Current Biology 31 (2021).

Conference proceedings

Li C, Kim SH, Rodgers C, Choi H, Wu A. One-hot generalized linear model for switching brain state discovery. International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR). Vienna, Austria (2024). Computational and Systems Neuroscience (Cosyne). Lisbon, Portugal (2024). Preprint available on arXiv (2023).

Nogueira R*, Rodgers CC*, Fusi S, Bruno RM. Sensorimotor strategies and neuronal representations of whisker-based object recognition in mouse barrel cortex. Conference on Cognitive Computational Neuroscience, CCN (2019).

* equal contribution

Park J, Rodgers C, Hong YK, Dahan J, Bruno R. Primary somatosensory cortex is essential for texture discrimination but not object detection in mice. IBRO Reports 6:S550 (2019).

Teng S, Sohl-Dickstein J, Rodgers CC, DeWeese MR, Harper N. IEEE Workshop Multi. Alt. Percept. for Vis. Impaired People, ICME (2013).

Competitive Grant Support

Current: BRAIN Initiative R34 Planning Project (NS137017)

          08/2024 - 08/2026
PI: Rodgers. Co-I: Berman.
Wirelessly recording and manipulating neural activity to study the sensorimotor dynamics of free behavior.

Awarded: New Investigator Award Program

07/2024 - 07/2026
Multi-PI: Rodgers (New Investigator), Levey (Contact), Golde. Alzheimer’s Association, NACC, and NIA.

Completed: McCamish Foundation Blue Sky Seed Grant

07/2023 - 07/2024
Multi-PI: Dyer and Rodgers. McCamish Parkinson’s Disease Innovation Program.

Current: NIDCD Early Career Researcher R21

04/2023 - 04/2026
PI: Rodgers. National Institute of Deafness and Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
DC019711

Current: Whitehall Foundation Research Grant

02/2023 - 02/2026
PI: Rodgers. Whitehall Foundation

Completed: Kavli Institute Seed Grant

01/2022 - 01/2023
PI: Rodgers. Kavli Institute.

Completed: NARSAD Young Investigator Award

01/2020 - 01/2022
PI: Rodgers. Brain & Behavior Research Foundation (BBRF)

Completed: NRSA Postdoctoral F32

04/2016 - 04/2019
PI: Rodgers. NIH/NINDS F32 NS096819.

Completed: Kavli Postdoctoral Fellowship

07/2014 - 07/2015
Kavli Institute for Brain Science

Academic Honors

British Association Medal (2007)

Presented upon graduation from McGill University
For highest performance on Engineering final exams

James McGill Award (2005, 2006)

McGill University

Scholarship, CMC Electronics Corporation (2006)

McGill University

Dean’s List, Semester Honors (2002, 2003, 2004)

Purdue University


Seminar Talks

Invited Speaker, Sense and Salience, Emory University (2024).
Invited Speaker
, EARS seminar series (2024, virtual).
Invited Speaker
, Georgia State University Neuroscience Institute seminar series (2023).
Invited Speaker
, GTNeuro seminar series, Georgia Tech (2023).
Speaker,
Seminar in Integrative Neuroscience, Emory University (2022).
Invited Speaker, Psychology Department, Emory University (2022).
Invited Speaker, Open Neurodata Showcase, Allen Institute (2022, virtual)
Discussion Panelist, Computational Neuroscience Journal Club (student-run), Emory (2022)
Invited Speaker, Neurosurgery Grand Rounds, Emory University (2022, virtual)
Invited Speaker, Frontiers in Neuroscience series, Emory University (2022, virtual)
Invited Speaker, Emory University Department of Cell Biology series (2022, virtual)

Selected Speaker, Open House for Simons-Emory Consortium on Motor Control (2021)
Invited Speaker
, University of Toronto Department of Physiology (2021, virtual)
Discussion Panelist, Future of Foraging seminar series (2021, virtual)
Invited Speaker, University of South Dakota Department of Biology (2021, virtual)
Selected Speaker, mEPSC external seminar series
Max Planck Institute for Brain Research, Frankfurt, Germany (virtual)
Invited Speaker, University of Cincinnati Department of Pharmacology and Systems Physiology (2021, virtual)
Invited Speaker, University of Texas-Dallas Department of Bioengineering (2021, virtual)
Invited Speaker, George Mason University Department of Bioengineering (2021, virtual)
Invited Speaker, University of Nebraska Medical Center Department of Neurological Sciences (virtual)
Invited Speaker, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Department of Biomedical Informatics and O’Donnell Brain Institute (virtual)
Selected Speaker, NeuroLaunchpad (virtual; watch online)
Invited Speaker, Fralin Institute at Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine (2021, virtual)
Invited Speaker, Christopher Moore’s lab (2020)
Brown University (virtual)
Invited Speaker, University of Alabama-Birmingham School of Medicine (2020)
Birmingham, AL (virtual)
Speaker, Neuromatch 2.0 and 3.0 (virtual; watch online)
Selected Speaker, Zuckerman Institute Postdoctoral Seminars (ZIPS, 2020)
Zuckerman Institute, New York, NY
Invited Speaker, Michael Long’s lab (2020)
New York University, New York, NY
Invited Speaker, Karel Svoboda’s lab (2020)
Janelia Research Campus, Ashburn, VA
Selected Speaker, “Barrels” SFN satellite meeting (2019)
Northwestern Medical School, Chicago, IL
Selected Speaker, "Sense to Synapse" conference (2019)
New York University, New York, NY
Invited Speaker, "Motor Club" seminar series bridging labs under U19 NS104649-01 (2019)
Columbia University, New York, NY
Invited Speaker, Inter-Kavli Institute mini-symposium (2018)
Rockefeller University, New York, NY
Invited Speaker, Simons Foundation Postdoc Meeting (2018)
Simons Foundation, New York, NY
Selected Speaker, Statistical Analysis of Neural Data (SAND) conference (2017)
Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA
Speaker, Junior Scientist Workshop on Neural Circuits and Behavior (2016)
Janelia Research Campus, Ashburn, VA
Invited Speaker, Michael Long’s and Dmitry Rinberg's labs (2013)
New York University, New York, NY
Invited Speaker, Matthew Shapiro’s lab (2013)
Mt Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY
Speaker, “Cal Cortex Club” (2013)
Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California, Berkeley
Speaker, Graduate Student Recruitment Data Blitz (2012)
Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California, Berkeley

Poster Presentations

* indicates presenting author

Li C, Kim SH, Rodgers C, Choi H, Wu A. One-hot generalized linear model for switching brain state discovery. International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR). Vienna, Austria (2024; upcoming).

Li C, Kim SH, Rodgers C, Choi H, Wu A. One-hot generalized linear model for switching brain state discovery. Computational and Systems Neuroscience (Cosyne). Lisbon, Portugal (2024; upcoming).

Walker NJ*, Williamson L, Gargiullo R, Rodgers C. Monitoring free and natural behavior of mice in 3D. Annual Biomedical Research Conference for Minoritized Scientists (ABRCMS).  Phoenix, AZ (2023; upcoming).

Mai J, Esho V, Gargiullo R, Pollay E, Zheng M, Bowe C, McElroy A*, Williamson L, Hussein O, Morgan C, Walker N, Brooks KA, Rodgers C. Active sound-seeking in freely moving mice before and after hearing loss. Advances and Perspectives in Auditory Neuroscience and Barrels, satellite conferences of the Society for Neuroscience. Washington, DC (2023; upcoming).

Walker NJ*, Williamson L, Gargiullo R, Rodgers C. Monitoring free and natural behavior of mice in 3D. Emory College Undergraduate Research Symposium. Atlanta, GA (2023).

Gargiullo R, Zheng M, Hussein O, Bowe C, Morgan C, Brooks KA, Rodgers CC*. Active auditory localization in freely moving mice. Sensation and Action conference, Thun, Switzerland (2023).

Bowe C*, Gargiullo R, Mai J, Williamson L, Zheng M, Pollay E, Hussein O, Esho V, Morgan C, Brooks KA, Rodgers CC. Active sound-seeking in mice as a model of Alzheimer’s Disease. Emory Neurosurgery Research and Innovation Symposium. Also gave a talk on the same topic. Atlanta, GA (2023).

Hussein O*, Pollay E, Bowe C, Gargiullo R, Rodgers C. Identifying brain regions that enable auditory localization in freely moving mice. Emory Undergraduate Research Symposium. Atlanta, GA (2023).

Gargiullo R, Zheng M, Hussein O, Bowe C, Morgan C, Brooks KA, Rodgers CC*. Active auditory localization in freely moving mice. Advanced and Perspectives in Auditory Neuroscience (APAN), a satellite meeting of the Society for Neuroscience conference. San Diego, CA (2022).

Morgan C*, Hussein O, Bowe C, Gargiullo R, Rodgers CC. Localizing damaged tissue in a mouse model of brain injury. Annual Biomedical Research Conference for Minoritized Scientists (ABRCMS). Anaheim, CA (2022).

Gargiullo R, Hussein O, Zheng M, Mai J, Pollay E, Bowe C, Morgan C, Brooks KA, Rodgers CC*. Active motor strategies for auditory and somatosensory decision-making. Simons-Emory International Consortium on Motor Control. Atlanta, GA (2022).

Kim SH*, Rodgers C, Choi H. Active sensing and functional connectivity in mouse barrel cortex. Simons-Emory International Consortium on Motor Control. Atlanta, GA (2022).

Nogueira R*, Fusi S, Rodgers CC, Bruno RM. “The geometry of cortical representations of touch in rodents.” Computational and Systems Neuroscience (COSYNE). Lisbon, Portugal (2022).

Morgan C*, Hussein O, Bowe C, Gargiullo R, Rodgers CC. Localizing damaged tissue in a mouse model of brain injury. Laney Graduate School Summer Opportunity for Academic Research (LGS-SOAR). Atlanta, GA (2022).

Selected posters that I presented as a graduate student or postdoc:
Animal Behavior Society annual meeting (virtual; 2021).
Innovators in Neuroscience: From Molecules to Mind (virtual)
Jointly held by Zuckerman Inst (Columbia Univ) and Friedman Brain Inst (Mt Sinai)
COSYNE (Computational and Systems Neuroscience) conference, virtual (2021, watch online)
Barrels, Society for Neuroscience satellite meeting, virtual (2020)
COSYNE (Computational and Systems Neuroscience) conference, Denver, CO (2020)
COSYNE (Computational and Systems Neuroscience) conference, Portugal (2019)
AREADNE (Research in Encoding and Decoding of Neural Ensembles), Greece (2018)
Society for Neuroscience annual meeting, Washington, DC (2017)
Society for Neuroscience annual meeting, San Diego, CA (2016)
Society for Neuroscience annual meeting, Chicago, IL (2015)
Society for Neuroscience annual meeting, Washington, DC (2014)
Society for Neuroscience annual meeting, New Orleans, LA (2012)
COSYNE (Computational and Systems Neuroscience) conference, Salt Lake City, UT (2011)
APAN (Advances and Perspectives in Auditory Neurophysiology), Chicago, IL (2009)

Professional Development and Service

Member of the Steering Committee (2024 - present)
      Emory Votes Initiative
Member of the Program Committee (2024 - 2026)
      Advances and Perspectives in Auditory Neuroscience (APAN)
Peer reviewer (2024)
      Computational and Systems Neuroscience (Cosyne) abstracts
Peer reviewer

      Nature (2024)
 Nature Communications (2024)

      Nature Neuroscience (2021, 2023)
      Nature Methods (2023)
      Cell Reports (2022, 2023)
      Current Biology (2021)
      Progress in Neurobiology (2021)
      Science Advances (2022)

Reviewer, Neuronal Communications study section, NIH ECR Program (2023)

Moderator, Neurobiology and Behavior Undergraduate Research Symposium, Emory (2023)

Member of graduate student committees                                                                                    

      Aryanna Wiggins-Gamble (Neuroscience, Gourley lab), quals and thesis (2024 - present)
      Janhavi Bhalerao (Neuroscience, Gourley lab), quals and thesis (2024 - present)
      Abigail Grassler (Neuroscience, Gourley lab), quals (2024)
      Marco Pena, (Neuroscience, Devineni lab), quals and thesis (2024 - present)
      Robert Pritchard (Bioengineering, Hang Lu lab), quals (observer only; 2024)
      Hymavathy Balasubramanian (Neuroscience, Murugan lab), quals and thesis (2023 - present)
      Kofi Vordzorgbe (Neuroscience, Sober lab), quals (2023)
      Viviana Valentin Valentin (Neuroscience, Gourley lab), quals (2023)
      Grace Jang (Neuroscience, Kragel lab), quals (2023)
      Michael Hess (Neuroscience, Berman lab), quals (2023)
      Ben Dykstra (Neuroscience, Murugan and Berman labs), quals (2023)
      Sean O’Connell (Biomed. Engineering, Sober and Pandarinath labs), thesis (2022 - present)

Member of undergraduate honors thesis committees
      Washington Huang, Pete Wenner’s lab (2024)
      Yuna Lee, Alan Emanuel’s lab (2024)
      Chris Feng (NBB), Malu Murugan’s lab (2024)
      James Song (QTM), Liang Zhao’s lab (2024)

Member, Admissions Committee, Neuroscience Graduate Program, Emory University (2021-present)
      Also serving as liaison to the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Committee
      Currently slated to co-chair this committee in 2024 - 2027

Participant, Unconscious Bias Reduction training (2021, 2023)
      Training in recognizing and reducing unconscious bias for members of admissions committees, provided by Emory University.

Invited Speaker, Academic Application Boot Camp, Columbia University (2021)
      Lecture on obtaining a faculty position

Invited Speaker, Neuroscience Graduate Program, Columbia University (2021)
      Lecture on obtaining a postdoctoral position

Member, Kavli Neuro Futures Group, Kavli Institute for Brain Science (2021 - present)
      Invited by the Kavli Institute to represent Columbia University
      Helped develop an online multi-institute meeting for science and professional development

Participant, Zuckerman Institute-wide anti-bias training (2021)
      A series of group sessions for the entire Zuckerman Institute, led by Dr. Dana Crawford
      Crawford Bias Reduction Theory: “Awareness, investigation, and reduction of bias”

Member, Zuckerman Institute Trainee Advisory Committee (2019 - present)
      Worked with Institute leadership to further equity in postdoctoral training
      Developed new procedures with HR to support international trainees
      Advocated for accommodations for postdoc parents

Co-chairman and co-founder, Zuckerman Institute Postdoctoral Seminars (2018)
      Co-created a postdoctoral seminar series at Columbia University
      Personally worked to ensure diversity in speakers

Professional society memberships
      Society for Neuroscience (lapsed)
      Animal Behavior Society (lapsed)
      Biomedical Engineering Society (lapsed)

Pre-Graduate Research Experience

National Instruments Corp. (Summer 2005)
Internship in hardware engineering group (data acquisition)
 
University of Maryland, College Park (Summer 2004)
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Research Experience for Undergraduates program, National Science Foundation
Advisor: Dr Jonathan Simon
Project: Signal processing of magnetoencephalographic (MEG) data in humans
 
Princeton University (Summer 2003)
Department of Physics
Research Experience for Undergraduates program, National Science Foundation
Advisors: Dr Stephen ForrestDr Vinod Menon
Project: Modeling energy levels in quantum dot structures

Teaching

Question writer and grader, Neuroscience written qualifying exams (2024)
Statistics workshop, small group panelist, Neuroscience Graduate Program (2024)
Grantwriting advisor, Neuroscience Graduate Program (2022 - present)
Guest Lecture,
Emory University (Spring 2024)
“Regression and Decoding” for BIOL 450 “Computational Neuroscience”.
Guest Lecture,
Emory University (Fall 2022, Fall 2023)
“Modulation of cortical sensory processing” for IBS 526 “Neuroanatomy and Systems Neuroscience”.
Student evaluations: 4.53 / 5
“Auditory Neuroscience” lecture in 2023

Guest Lecture, University of Tennessee-Knoxville (2021)
       Neurobiology Journal Club, taught by Professor Keerthi Krishnan

Course Co-Creator, Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, Berkeley (2013)

      Co-developed a new “Applied statistics for neuroscience” course for PhD students
      Created syllabus, curated reading material, outlined lectures, and designed problem sets

Graduate student instructor, Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, Berkeley
“Physiological and genetic basis of behavior” (Fall 2009)
      An upper division neurobiology course, with Kristin Scott and Daniel Feldman
      Led weekly discussion sections and taught students to read primary research articles
      Helped prepare and grade exams

Graduate student instructor, Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, Berkeley
“Mind, brain, and behavior” (Spring 2009)
      A general science course, with David Presti
      Led weekly discussion sections and taught study skills such as self-assessment
      Moderated activities such as formal debates among students on course material
      Helped prepare and grade exams

Teaching assistant, middle school summer camp (Summer 2006)
      Robinson Center for Young Scholars, University of Washington, Seattle, WA
​      Helped teach a course about “Energy”, including field trips

Mentoring

Participant, HHMI Mentorship Skills Development Course (2023-2024)
      A year-long course of monthly meetings organized by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, both virtual and in-person in Bethesda, MD.

Participant, “Culturally Aware Mentoring” training (2022)
      A series of interactive group sessions for mentors at Emory University, led by a team of researchers from the Center for the Improvement of Mentored Experience in Research (CIMER) at the University of Wisconsin.

Mentor, Intersections Science Fellows (2021)
      Mentored academia-track postdocs from historically under-represented backgrounds
Certified Mentor
, Atlanta Society of Mentors (2021)
Completed interactive faculty workshop on building skills for academic mentorship
Participant, “Mentoring Up” workshop series, Columbia University (2021 - present)
      Learned professional development skills for scientific leadership and inclusivity

People who I mentored as a PI
Sukrith Sriram Vedapuram, Master’s Student, Biomedical Engineering (2024 - present)
Kai Park, undergraduate researcher (2024 - present)
Joseph Chung, undergraduate researcher (2024 - present)
Lucas Williamson, PhD student, Neuroscience Graduate Program (2023 - present)
      Selected for a T32 training grant in Integrative Biology (T32NS096050)
      Scholar in the Computational Neuroengineering Training Program (T32EB025816)
Abigail McElroy, PhD student, Neuroscience Graduate Program (2023 - present)
      Selected for a T32 training grant in Integrative Biology (T32NS096050)
Jason Song, undergraduate researcher (2023 - present)
      QTM Research Fellow
Nia Walker, undergraduate researcher (Summer 2023)
      LGS-SOAR scholar
Cedric Bowe, MD/PhD student, Neuroscience Graduate Program (MD/PhD, 2022-present)

Eden Zhu, rotation student, Neuroscience Graduate Program (2022)
      Co-mentored with Peter Wenner
Rowan Gargiullo, research specialist (2022 - present)
Carrissa Morgan, undergraduate researcher (Summer 2022)
      LGS-SOAR scholar
Valentina Esho, undergraduate researcher (2023 - present)
Eliana Pollay, undergraduate researcher (2022 - present)
Rahil Vasa, undergraduate researcher (2022)
Jessica Mai, undergraduate researcher (2022 - present)
      FYRE scholar, and funded by an Undergraduate Research Fellowship
Megan Zheng, undergraduate researcher (2022 - 2023)
SIRE scholar
Osama Hussein, undergraduate researcher (2022 - 2023)
      Completed a thesis with highest honors. Funded by an Undergraduate Research Fellowship.

People who I mentored as a postdoc
Esther Greeman, technician (2019 - 2021)
      Esther is now a member of the Dumitriu lab at Columbia University.
Jason Patterson, undergraduate research (2017)
      Jason is now in the Bioinformatics Master's program at Columbia University.
B Christina Pil, technician (2016 - 2018)
      Christina is now in the MD program at Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
Philip Calafati, undergraduate thesis research and technician (2015 - 2016)
      Philip is now a scientist at Regeneron, Inc.
Dr Akash Khanna, volunteer researcher and technician (2014 - 2015)
      Dr Khanna received a PhD in neuroscience from Johns Hopkins University in 2021.

People who I mentored as a graduate student
Ambika (Rustagi) Chou, undergraduate thesis research (2012)
      Ambika is now a Senior Human Factors Specialist at UL.
Daniel Resnick, undergraduate thesis research (2011)
      Daniel received an Outstanding Poster Award for this work at the Molecular and Cellular Biology Undergraduate Research Conference.
      He is now an engineer at Caffeine Inc.
Dr Sarah Kochik, undergraduate research (2010)
      Dr Kochik later received her OD and a PhD in Vision Science from Berkeley and is presently Assistant Clinical Professor at Berkeley.
Dr Trevor Gonzalinajec, undergraduate thesis research (2009)
      Dr Gonzalinajec later received his PhD in Biophysics from Berkeley and is now Adjunct Professor of Physics at College of Marin.