Summary
Anway Pimpalkar is a biomedical engineer and graduate research fellow with nine years of multidisciplinary research experience building neural interfaces, ingestible devices, and rehabilitation technologies across Johns Hopkins, Harvard, and MIT. He focuses on translating neuromodulation and sensory-motor feedback into clinical tools that improve life for people with sensory, motor, and cognitive impairments, and has been recognized for work in neurorehabilitation and haptics (ICORR Best Student Paper finalist). His projects span hardware, machine learning, and control systems—from pneumatic haptics and MRI segmentation with U-Nets to real-time imaging for automated agriculture—demonstrating a rare blend of wet‑lab insight and systems engineering. Currently pursuing a PhD in Bioengineering at Harvard while co-advised across institutions, he leverages cross-disciplinary mentorship to prototype ingestible and interactive therapies that couple drug delivery with neuromodulation.
9 years of coding experience
2 years of employment as a software developer
Johns Hopkins University
Doctor of Philosophy - PhD Bioengineering, Doctor of Philosophy - PhD Bioengineering at Harvard University
Bachelor of Technology - BTech Electronics and Telecommunication Engineering, Bachelor of Technology - BTech Electronics and Telecommunication Engineering at COEP Technological University
Marathi, English, Hindi