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Georgia Tech Uses Computing and Engineering Methods to Shift Neuroscience Paradigms

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Georgia Tech researchers are merging engineering and computation with neuroscience to unlock new therapies for brain disorders.
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Nov 14, 2025 | By Tess Malone - Research Communications
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Graphic of an abstract, AI-driven design featuring a glowing brain silhouette with interconnected neural nodes and data streams in the background.
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Annabelle Singer, Garrett Stanley, and Chethan Pandarinath are at the forefront of Georgia Tech’s neuro-computation revolution. Singer is pioneering sensory flicker therapies to restore memory and immune function in Alzheimer’s patients, Stanley is decoding the brain’s sensory “conversation” to develop interventions for Parkinson’s, and Pandarinath is building brain-computer interfaces that help paralyzed patients regain movement and communication.

Together, their work blends engineering, data science, and neuroscience to transform how we treat neurological disease.

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