Alisha Menon will study ways to help the brain talk to computers
Incoming graduate student Alisha Menon is featured in a community post on the Beaverton Patch titled “Brilliant Teen Seeks PhD At UC Berkeley With STEM Award.” Menon graduated from Oregon Connections Academy (ORCA), a statewide online public high school, at age 16 and took only 3 years to complete her B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Arizona State University. She will attend Berkeley in the fall on an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship, studying Control, Intelligent Systems, and Robotics (CIR). “I see the potential for infinite applications – from prosthetics controlled directly by neural signals to brain-computer interfaces that will eliminate the need for secondary interaction tools like keyboards,” Menon said. “There are so many directions (that) technology that interacts with the brain can go. Some of these ideas are currently being developed such as virtual reality/artificial reality interfaces, rehabilitation systems, and deep brain stimulation for Parkinson’s. Other ideas are more futuristic such as ‘typing’ using neural signals. I can’t wait to be a part of this field as it grows and develops!”