Amy Orsborn is an associate professor at the University of Washington with a decade of experience at the intersection of electrical engineering and bioengineering, specializing in brain-machine interfaces and motor neural circuit learning. Her research combines engineering rigor with neuroscience to treat neurological disorders and to probe how closed-loop, co-adaptive BMI systems reshape neural activity. Trained at UC Berkeley and seasoned by a postdoc on high–degree-of-freedom BMIs, she blends electrophysiology (spikes, LFPs, ECoG) with systems-level modeling and translational aims. Beyond typical academic roles, she has a track record of hands-on teaching and mentoring in engineering design and motor control labs, reflecting a strong commitment to training the next generation of neuroengineers.
10 years of coding experience
12 years of employment as a software developer
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Bioengineering and Biomedical Engineering, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Bioengineering and Biomedical Engineering at University of California, Berkeley
Bachelor of Science (B.S.), Engineering Physics, Bachelor of Science (B.S.), Engineering Physics at Case Western Reserve University
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