2022 Swanson School Summary of Faculty Research

Page 19

BIOENGINEERING

Neeraj J. Gandhi, PhD

404 Benedum Hall | 3700 O’Hara Street | Pittsburgh, PA 15261

Professor

P: 412-647-3076 neg8@pitt.edu www.pitt.edu/~neg8/

The nervous system continuously monitors the environment and produces overt or covert orienting behavior in response to relevant sensory stimulation. Research in the Cognition and Sensorimotor Integration (CSI) lab investigates neural mechanisms involved in the multiple facets

of sensory-to-motor transformations, including cognitive processes. We employ a combination of experimental (extracellular recording, microstimulation, chemical microinjections, transient blink perturbation) and computational tools. An understanding of the cognitive and

motoric processes that produce integrated orienting behavior has implications for neural prostheses as well as diagnostic value for deficits resulting from neuropsychiatric disorders (e.g., ADHD, schizophrenia) and ocular dysmotility (e.g., strabismus).

Neural Coding through Population Dynamics The instantaneous firing rate of individual neurons has traditionally been assumed to be the primary neural correlate of sensory, cognitive, and motor processes. Although this so-called rate code can explain a number of perceptual and behavioral phenomena, it falls short in other instances. One of the research directions in the CSI lab involves considering alternatives to standard rate-based coding. This requires zooming out to the systems level and studying the dynamics of activity in a network or population of neurons. Using pooled single-unit recordings, we have found that the temporal structure of population activity fluctuates in the visual burst but remains stable in the motor burst of visuomovement neurons, specifying a code to distinguish between incoming sensory output and premotor output. We plan to further explore the role of the population temporal code in sensorimotor integration using multi-electrode techniques as well as testing the robustness of the code using computational modelling.

Interception of Moving Stimulus While navigating through their local environment, primates combine rapid (saccadic) and slow (pursuit) voluntary eye movements in an effort to gather visual information from stationary and moving objects. Throughout much of the twentieth century, these eye movements were mostly studied in isolation; however, recent experiments in several laboratories have shown that their neural substrates may overlap significantly. Future experiments in our laboratory will combine behavioral, neurophysiological, and computational techniques to compare the role(s) of the cortex, superior colliculus and oculomotor brainstem in the planning and execution of saccades to both static and moving stimuli. Basic knowledge gathered from these experiments will allow us to test specific hypotheses concerning the role of these structures in the maintenance of saccade accuracy and precision to both static and moving targets as well as the selection of targets in more complex environments. DEPARTMENT OF BIOENGINEERING

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Xiayun (Sharon) Zhao, PhD

37min
pages 133-154

Jörg M.K. Wiezorek, PhD

2min
page 131

Wei Xiong, PhD, D.Eng

1min
page 132

Guofeng Wang, PhD

2min
page 130

Jeffrey Vipperman, PhD

2min
page 129

Albert C. To, PhD

1min
page 128

Patrick Smolinski, PhD

1min
page 127

Inanc Senocak, PhD

1min
page 126

David Schmidt, PhD

2min
page 125

Ian Nettleship, PhD

2min
page 124

Scott X. Mao, PhD

2min
page 123

Jung-Kun Lee, PhD

3min
page 122

Tevis D. B. Jacobs, PhD

1min
page 121

William W. Clark, PhD

2min
page 118

Daniel G. Cole, PhD, PE

2min
page 119

Katherine Hornbostel, PhD

1min
page 120

Minking K. Chyu, PhD

2min
page 117

Heng Ban, PhD, PE

2min
page 115

Hessam Babaee, PhD

2min
page 114

Michael D. Sherwin, PhD, P.E

2min
pages 111-113

Markus Chmielus, PhD

1min
page 116

M. Ravi Shankar, PhD

2min
page 110

Amin Rahimian, PhD

1min
page 108

Jayant Rajgopal, PhD, P.E

2min
page 109

Lisa M. Maillart, PhD

2min
page 107

Paul W. Leu, PhD

1min
page 106

Daniel R. Jiang, PhD

1min
page 105

Oliver Hinder, PhD

2min
page 104

Joel M. Haight, PhD, P.E., CIH, CSP

2min
page 103

Renee M. Clark, PhD

2min
page 102

Karen M. Bursic, PhD

1min
page 100

Youngjae Chun, PhD

3min
page 101

Mary Besterfield-Sacre, PhD

2min
page 99

Minhee Yun, PhD

2min
pages 96-97

Mostafa Bedewy, PhD

1min
page 98

Nathan Youngblood, PhD

2min
page 95

Jun Yang, PhD

3min
page 94

Gregory F. Reed, PhD

3min
page 91

Feng Xiong, PhD

2min
page 93

Inhee Lee, PhD

2min
page 88

Guangyong Li, PhD

2min
page 89

Alexis Kwasinski, PhD

2min
page 87

Hong Koo Kim, PhD

2min
page 86

Alex K. Jones, PhD

3min
page 85

Brandon M. Grainger, PhD

2min
page 83

Alan D. George, PhD, FIEEE

2min
page 82

Masoud Barati, PhD

2min
page 81

Mai Abdelhakim, PhD

1min
page 80

Meng Wang, PhD

1min
pages 78-79

Radisav Vidic, PhD

2min
page 77

Julie M. Vandenbossche, PhD, PE

2min
page 76

Aleksandar Stevanovic, PhD, P.E., FASCE

2min
page 75

Piervincenzo Rizzo, PhD

2min
page 74

Xu Liang, PhD

2min
page 71

Jeen-Shang Lin, PhD, P.E

2min
page 72

Carla Ng, PhD

2min
page 73

Sarah Haig, PhD

2min
page 69

Lei Fang, PhD

3min
page 66

Andrew P. Bunger, PhD

2min
page 65

Alessandro Fascetti, PhD

2min
page 67

Melissa Bilec, PhD

2min
page 64

Judith C. Yang, PhD

2min
pages 61-63

Götz Veser, PhD

2min
page 59

Christopher E. Wilmer, PhD

1min
page 60

Sachin S. Velankar, PhD

2min
page 58

Tagbo Niepa, PhD

2min
page 55

Jason E. Shoemaker, PhD

1min
page 57

Giannis Mpourmpakis, PhD

2min
page 54

Badie Morsi, PhD

3min
page 53

James R. McKone, PhD

1min
page 52

Lei Li, PhD

1min
page 50

Steve R. Little, PhD

2min
page 51

John A. Keith, PhD

2min
page 49

J. Karl Johnson, PhD

2min
page 48

Susan Fullerton, PhD

2min
page 47

Robert M. Enick, PhD

2min
page 46

Eric J. Beckman, PhD

2min
page 45

Ipsita Banerjee, PhD

2min
page 44

Ioannis Zervantonakis, PhD

2min
pages 41-43

Savio L-Y. Woo, PhD, D.Sc., D.Eng

2min
page 40

Justin S. Weinbaum, PhD

1min
page 39

Jonathan Vande Geest, PhD

1min
page 37

David A. Vorp, PhD

2min
page 38

Sanjeev G. Shroff, PhD

2min
page 34

Gelsy Torres-Oviedo, PhD

3min
page 36

George Stetten, MD, PhD

2min
page 35

Joseph Thomas Samosky, PhD

2min
page 33

Warren C. Ruder, PhD

1min
page 32

Partha Roy, PhD

2min
page 31

Prashant N. Kumta, PhD

2min
page 27

Spandan Maiti, PhD

2min
page 29

Mark Redfern, PhD

2min
page 30

Patrick J. Loughlin, PhD

2min
page 28

Mangesh Kulkarni, PhD

1min
page 26

Takashi “TK” Kozai, PhD

2min
page 25

Katrina M. Knight, PhD

2min
page 24

Bistra Iordanova, PhD

1min
page 23

Alan D. Hirschman, PhD

1min
page 21

Mark Gartner, PhD

1min
page 20

William Federspiel, PhD

2min
page 18

Neeraj J. Gandhi, PhD

2min
page 19

Tamer S. Ibrahim, PhD

5min
page 22

Richard E. Debski, PhD

1min
page 17

Lance A. Davidson, PhD

2min
page 16

Rakié Cham, PhD

2min
page 13

Steven Abramowitch, PhD

2min
page 8

Moni Kanchan Datta, PhD

2min
page 15

Bryan N. Brown, PhD

1min
page 12

Kurt E. Beschorner, PhD

2min
page 10

Harvey Borovetz, PhD

1min
page 11

Aaron Batista, PhD

4min
page 9

Tracy Cui, PhD

2min
page 14
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