2023 Bioengineering Cohort Adds Top Talent
The Knight Campus welcomed 12 PhD students in the fall of 2023. The majority are new graduate students in the Department of Bioengineering along with others working in Knight Campus labs from a variety of science disciplines at the UO. Their collective research interests span from regenerative medicine to constructing microdevices for neuroengineering to drug delivery. Students in this cohort come from Oregon, across the country, and around the world, including Germany, India, and China.
Ander Switalla
Hometown: Portland, OR
Undergraduate Studies: Oregon State University
"I'm very interested the brain, specifically in micro-fabrication and neuroscience. I grew up in Oregon and I love it here. Knight Campus has a start-up energy to it. There's a young energy here with a lot of ambition. Because the program is so new, it feels like everyone is invested in our success more."
Malvika Singhal
Hometown: Bay Area, CA
Undergraduate Studies: University of California, Berkeley
"I did my undergrad in Bioengineering and I'm pursuing a PhD in Biochemistry and being at Knight Campus I have the best of both worlds, where I can be in a bioengineering lab but still have ties and connections to people in Chemistry and Biology. That encouragement for an interdisciplinary approach is a great opportunity."
Cameron Moore
Hometown: Seffner, FL
Undergraduate Studies: The Evergreen State College
"In my senior year at Evergreen State College, I discovered an interest in the green synthesis of nanoparticles and carbon dots. I long to be an expert in the field of bionanotechnology and contribute to research focused on developing nanomaterials for therapeutic applications, which steered me towards a future in bioengineering."
Kelly Leguineche
Hometown: Pittsburgh
Undergraduate Studies: Northwestern University, Georgia Institute of Technology
"As a high school student, my AP bio teacher introduced us to tissue engineering and provided the opportunity to learn tissue culture skills in a lab at Carnegie Mellon. Sounded like science fiction and I was totally hooked. I've been working in this space ever since."
Maya Kasteleiner
Hometown: Idstein, Germany
Undergraduate Studies: Julius-Maximilians-Universitaet Wuerzburg
"During an internship at the Knight Campus earlier this year, I was fortunate to spend time in both the Lindberg and Dalton labs and to see the well-connected work that is being done all over Knight Campus. Through the strong networks that have been built between the labs, I am excited to contribute to multiple projects and to collaborate with incredible people with different research perspectives. Seeing the amazing work that is done here, there was no other option than to come back for a PhD."
Rose Hulsey-Vincent
Hometown: Woodinville, Washington
Undergraduate Studies: Vassar College
“I use electrophysiology and optogenetics to study the neuroscience of complex motor behaviors by studying birdsong in Tim Gardner’s Lab at the Knight Campus. I have learned a lot by working alongside the bioengineers who develop the tools I use to measure neural activity! This is made possible by the Knight Campus’s collaborative research community.”
Phillip Hernandez
Hometown: Coos Bay, OR
Undergraduate Studies: Oregon State University
"I'm working on drug delivery for osteoarthritis. I'm really interested in looking at muskuloskeletal diseases and have spent the past year working in Guldberg Lab as a research assistant. I became interested in medicine at an early age and have enjoyed approaching biomedical research from an engineering perspective. I majored in bioengineering at OSU and never looked back."
Ifra Ilyas Ansari
Hometown: Uttar Pradesh, India
Undergraduate Studies: Aligarh Muslim University, India
"When I was young, I aspired to go into medicine. Instead, I chose to delve into the realm of science. Ultimately, I earned an Honors Bachelor of Science in Chemistry with a minor in Biology and had the honor to graduate as the class valedictorian. Later, I pursued a Master of Science in Nanotechnology Engineering in India, where I discovered my passion for materials research. When I decided to embark on a PhD journey, my goal was to get in to the biomaterials industry. In my first year at UO, I enrolled in a micro-fabrication class taught by Professor Felix Deku. I also had the privilege of rotating in his lab. It was in this setting that I was introduced to the captivating field of translational research, particularly focusing on microdevices and biomaterials for brain implants. Given that this perfectly aligned with my academic background, research interests, and professional goals I made a decision to join the Deku lab for my PhD. At long last, I had finally found a way to pursue both my enduring passion for medicine and science at the Knight Campus."