Bradley Voyteck

Entrepreneurship

Bradley Voyteck

course state
Immersion

Bradley Voyteck

Bradley Voytek is a Professor in the Department of Cognitive Science at the University of California, San Diego. His research focuses on understanding the neural mechanisms underlying cognition, with particular emphasis on brain oscillations, neural dynamics, and computational neuroscience. He employs a multidisciplinary approach combining electrophysiology, computational modeling, and data science to investigate how brain activity supports behavior and cognition.

Voytek's work has broad implications for understanding neurological disorders and advancing brain-computer interfaces. He is also dedicated to open science and reproducibility in neuroscience, actively contributing to the development of tools and resources that promote transparent research practices.

Relevant description of the program or curriculum: Bradley Voytek is a Professor in the Department of Cognitive Science, the Halıcıoğlu Data Science Institute, and the Neurosciences Graduate Program at UC San Diego. He is both an Alfred P. Sloan Neuroscience Research Fellow and a Kavli Fellow of the National Academies of Sciences, as well as a founding faculty member of the UC San Diego Halıcıoğlu Data Science Institute and the Undergraduate Data Science program. After his PhD at UC Berkeley, he joined Uber as their first data scientist—when it was a 10-person startup—where he helped build their data science strategy and team.

His research lab combines large-scale data science and machine learning to study how brain regions communicate with one another, and how that communication changes with aging and disease. He is an advocate for promoting science to the public and speaks extensively with students at all grade levels about the joys of scientific research and discovery. In addition to his academic publications, his outreach work has appeared in outlets ranging from Scientific American and NPR to the San Diego Comic-Con. He is currently writing a book with neuroscientist Ashley Juavinett regarding the powerful future of data science in neuroscience discovery, though his most important contribution to science is his book with fellow neuroscientist Tim Verstynen, "Do Zombies Dream of Undead Sheep?", by Princeton University Press.

Immersion

Bradley Voyteck

Bradley Voytek is a Professor in the Department of Cognitive Science at the University of California, San Diego. His research focuses on understanding the neural mechanisms underlying cognition, with particular emphasis on brain oscillations, neural dynamics, and computational neuroscience. He employs a multidisciplinary approach combining electrophysiology, computational modeling, and data science to investigate how brain activity supports behavior and cognition.

Voytek's work has broad implications for understanding neurological disorders and advancing brain-computer interfaces. He is also dedicated to open science and reproducibility in neuroscience, actively contributing to the development of tools and resources that promote transparent research practices.

Relevant description of the program or curriculum: Bradley Voytek is a Professor in the Department of Cognitive Science, the Halıcıoğlu Data Science Institute, and the Neurosciences Graduate Program at UC San Diego. He is both an Alfred P. Sloan Neuroscience Research Fellow and a Kavli Fellow of the National Academies of Sciences, as well as a founding faculty member of the UC San Diego Halıcıoğlu Data Science Institute and the Undergraduate Data Science program. After his PhD at UC Berkeley, he joined Uber as their first data scientist—when it was a 10-person startup—where he helped build their data science strategy and team.

His research lab combines large-scale data science and machine learning to study how brain regions communicate with one another, and how that communication changes with aging and disease. He is an advocate for promoting science to the public and speaks extensively with students at all grade levels about the joys of scientific research and discovery. In addition to his academic publications, his outreach work has appeared in outlets ranging from Scientific American and NPR to the San Diego Comic-Con. He is currently writing a book with neuroscientist Ashley Juavinett regarding the powerful future of data science in neuroscience discovery, though his most important contribution to science is his book with fellow neuroscientist Tim Verstynen, "Do Zombies Dream of Undead Sheep?", by Princeton University Press.