Aaron Rosado is a software engineer and clinician-in-training who applies 11 years of interdisciplinary research experience to build diagnostic tools, analytics, and instrumentation at the intersection of biophysics and medicine. Trained at MIT, Georgia Tech, and Emory (M.D.-Ph.D. candidate), he combines microfluidic device design, micromechanical actuation, HPC/cloud computing, and computer vision to extend the resolution and capability of biomembrane force probe instrumentation. His work investigates immune receptor biomechanics—particularly how Mac-1 dysfunction contributes to SLE—and explores using immune receptors and cells as sensitive biological agent detectors. Based in Atlanta, he bridges wet lab molecular biology with AI-driven analysis and medical software to push translational research toward clinical applications. An uncommon strength is his hands-on development of both hardware and software to amplify laboratory analytic throughput and precision.
11 years of coding experience
S.B. in Chemical-Biological Engineering (10B), Chemical Engineering and Biology, S.B. in Chemical-Biological Engineering (10B), Chemical Engineering and Biology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Biomedical/Medical Engineering, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Biomedical/Medical Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology
M.D.-Ph.D., Medicine, Biomedical Engineering, M.D.-Ph.D., Medicine, Biomedical Engineering at Emory University School of Medicine
Contributions:5 pushes, 1 branch in 2 years 4 months
Find and Hire Top DevelopersWe’ve analyzed the programming source code of over 60 million software developers on GitHub and scored them by 50,000 skills. Sign-up on Prog,AI to search for software developers.