I’m a neuroscientist currently working as a postdoctoral fellow at the Institut de Neurosciences de la Timone in Marseille, France. My research focuses on characterizing the structure and dynamics of brain signals recorded at a single-neuron resolution while animals perform and learn complex tasks. Engineer by training with a PhD in computational neuroscience, my background lies at the intersection of physics, engineering and neurobiology. My primary research goal is to use quantitative systems-level approaches to understand how dynamic patterns of neural activity give rise to behaviorally-relevant computations in the brain. In my work, I use a variety of techniques, ranging from electrophysiology, psychophysics, behavioral modeling, probabilistic bayesian inference, as well as dimensionality reduction and statistical methods for neural data processing and analyses.
I obtained my PhD from MIT in 2021 working with Mehrdad Jazayeri in the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences & Technology. Prior to my PhD, I studied aerospace engineering and obtained two MSc from ISAE-Supaéro (2016) and Caltech (2015). My full CV can be accessed here. |