Summary
Miloš Nikolić is a postdoctoral researcher at Princeton with a decade of experience applying physics and quantitative methods to living systems, particularly cancer cell biomechanics, quantitative microscopy, and molecular noise in genetic networks. With a Biophysics PhD from UMD and a physics BA from Princeton, he blends optical imaging, engineered cell microenvironments, and computational modeling to design incisive experiments and extract robust, reproducible insights. He is proficient in data science and statistics, turning complex biological variability into testable models and actionable conclusions. Known for clear scientific writing and interdisciplinary collaboration, he aims to translate fundamental biophysical understanding into impactful research tools and therapies. An unassuming strength is his facility to pivot between hands-on microscopy and abstract modeling, enabling projects that span from instrument design to predictive theory.
9 years of coding experience
Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Biophysics, Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Biophysics at University of Maryland
IB, IB at United World College of the Adriatic
Bachelor of Arts (B.A.), Physics, Bachelor of Arts (B.A.), Physics at Princeton University
Italian, montenegrin, Spanish