Summary
Payam Zandiyeh is an adjunct professor and assistant professor with eight years of experience at the intersection of orthopedic surgery and biomechanical engineering, based in Houston. His research rigorously quantifies bone and joint biomechanics after surgical, rehabilitative, prosthetic, or pharmaceutical interventions using advanced imaging and measurement systems like dynamic stereo x-ray, CT, and MRI. A Co-Investigator on CPRIT-funded projects, he leads multidisciplinary studies that bridge lab-based motion analysis and clinical outcomes to evaluate functional restoration. He brings hands-on technical expertise from postdoctoral work—developing MATLAB, C++, and C tools, and applying machine learning and pattern recognition—to extract meaningful signals from complex biomechanical datasets. Colleagues rely on him for translating precise measurement techniques into actionable insights for preserving musculoskeletal health.
8 years of coding experience
2 years of employment as a software developer
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Mechanical Engineering, A, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Mechanical Engineering, A at University of Calgary
Master’s Degree, Pattern recognition, machine learning, computer vision, neuro-fuzzy systems, Master’s Degree, Pattern recognition, machine learning, computer vision, neuro-fuzzy systems at Sharif University of Technology
English, Persian