Summary
Ajani Stewart is a PhD student in Computational Neuroscience at MIT with nine years of research experience bridging computer science, mathematics, and cognitive science. He has contributed to multiple MIT labs (BCS, McDermott, DiCarlo) and Oak Ridge National Laboratory, applying quantitative and computational methods to sensory and machine-learning problems. His background in analyzing large-scale ML code refactorings and experimental work in human-computer interaction and cybersecurity gives him a rare blend of practical software analysis and neuroscience modeling skills. As a postbaccalaureate researcher and former visiting student at MIT, he mentors peers in programming and brings hands-on experience running behavioral and computational experiments. Based in Cambridge, he combines rigorous mathematical training from Macaulay Honors College with deep domain expertise in auditory and visual computation.
9 years of coding experience
2 years of employment as a software developer
Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Computational Neuroscience, Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Computational Neuroscience at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bachelor's degree, Mathematics and Computer Science, Bachelor's degree, Mathematics and Computer Science at Macaulay Honors College at The City University of New York