Group Members

[ Principal Investigator | Postdocs | Graduate Students | Staff | Research Assistants | Undergrads | Alumni ]

Principal Investigator

KARL DEISSEROTH
deissero at stanford.edu

Karl received his bachelor's degree from Harvard in 1992, his PhD from Stanford in 1998, and his MD from Stanford in 2000. He completed postdoctoral training, medical internship, and adult psychiatry residency at Stanford, and he was board-certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology in 2006. He tries to find spare time for flyfishing.

Post-docs

MELISSA WARDEN
mwarden at stanford.edu

Melissa received her A.B. in Molecular Biology from Princeton University and her Ph.D. in Systems Neuroscience from MIT. During her graduate work with Earl Miller in systems neurophysiology, she studied the neural basis of multi-item short term memory in the prefrontal cortex.

TOM DAVIDSON
tjd at stanford.edu

Tom received his bachelor's degree in the history of science from Harvard, and his Ph.D. in neuroscience from MIT. In his graduate work (in the lab of Matt Wilson), he studied spontaneous memory reactivation in the hippocampus of animals as they explored large environments. He joined the D-lab in the fall of 2009, and is developing dynamic optogenetic stimulation methods for the study of memory in behaving animals.

KWANGHUN CHUNG
khchung at stanford.edu

AVISHEK ADHIKARI
avishek at stanford.edu

Avishek received his Bachelor's in Science degree from the University of Sao Paulo, in Brazil. From 2005-2010 he worked at Columbia University with Prof. Joshua Gordon and Prof. Rene Hen studying the activity of the hippocampal-medial prefrontal cortical pathway in mice during anxiety. He joined Stanford in 2011, to continue his studies on the neural circuits underlying fear and anxiety by combining in vivo electrophysiology and optogenetics. Outside the lab Avi enjoys playing guitar, drawing, and eating seafood.
https://scbe.stanford.edu/profiles/Avishek_Adhikari

AARON ANDALMAN
aandal at stanford.edu

Aaron received his bachelor's degree in computer science from Stanford in 1999 and his Ph.D. in neuroscience from MIT in 2009. During graduate school he studied the function of basal ganglia-thalamocortical circuits in motor learning behaviors. As a postdoc, he is interested in studying the principles of reward learning using optical methods for observing and manipulating neural circuits. Outside of lab he enjoys piano, tennis, squash, basketball, and recreational programming.

PAUL KALANITHI
pkalanithi at stanford.edu

Paul completed his undergraduate studies at Stanford in English and Human Biology (Neuroscience). He received an M.Phil in History & Philosophy of Science from Cambridge before starting medical school at Yale. During medical school, he quantified interneuron populations of the basal ganglia in postmortem Tourette Syndrome patients in the lab of Flora Vaccarino. He is currently a neurosurgery resident at Stanford, and works in both the Shenoy and Deisseroth labs, using optogenetics in the primate motor system.

TALIA LERNER
talia.lerner at stanford.edu

Talia received her bachelor�s degree in Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry from Yale in 2006 and her Ph.D. in Neuroscience from UCSF in 2011. Her graduate work (in Anatol Kreitzer�s lab) focused on understanding the mechanisms of synaptic plasticity in the striatum, in particular the regulation of this plasticity by dopamine and adenosine. In the Deisseroth Lab, she is exploring the role of basal ganglia circuit function and dopamine signaling in the development and expression of habitual behavior.

SOO YEUN LEE
synlee at stanford.edu

Soo received her BA in Molecular & Cell Biology at UC Berkeley. She worked as a bioinformatics associate in industry and a molecular biology research assistant at Stanford, before continuing onto her PhD at UC Irvine. Her graduate thesis in Ivan Soltesz's lab focused on the cell-type specific organization and modulation of GABAergic circuits, with an emphasis in neuropeptide signaling pathways. As a postdoc, she is interested in combining her molecular and electrophysiological background to pursue new opsin design and engineering strategies.

ANDRE BERNDT
berndt at stanford.edu

Andre Berndt studied Biophysics at the Humboldt University in Berlin and received his PhD in 2011. He studied the molecular mechanism of Channelrhodopsins and designed variants with new features in Peter Hegemann's lab. He continues this work in Karl Deisseorth's lab in order to extend the optogenetic toolbox.

Graduate Students

LOGAN GROSENICK
logang at stanford.edu

Logan received bachelors degrees with honors in Biology and Psychology from Stanford, and a Masters in Statistics from Stanford. He is currently a Ph. D. candidate in the Neurosciences Program and a trainee at the Stanford Center for Mind, Brain, and Computation. He is interested in developing and applying novel computational and imaging techniques for observing, controlling, and understanding neuronal circuit dynamics.
https://www.stanford.edu/~logang

LISA GUNAYDIN
gunaydin at stanford.edu

JOANNA MATTIS
jmattis at stanford.edu

Joanna received a BS in Biology from Yale in 2006 and an M.Phil in Physiology, Development, and Neuroscience from Cambridge University in 2007. She is in the MD/PhD program (MSTP) and the Neurosciences Ph.D Program at Stanford.

LIEF FENNO
lfenno at stanford.edu

Lief received his Bachelors degree in neurobiology from Harvard, where he worked at the intersection of human embryonic stem cells and Parkinson's disease. Afterward, he continued this endevor at the Harvard Stem Cell Institute in Boston before joining the Stanford Neuroscience program. He's currently working with the effort to engineer opsins with novel functions and investigating depression.

ROHIT PRAKASH
ropra at stanford.edu

Rohit received his B.S. in Physics and Philosophy at UNC-Chapel Hill. He worked at the NIH for a brief time afterwards and now is an M.D./Ph.D. student in the neuroscience program. He is currently working on the two-photon.

SUNG-YON KIM
sungyonkim at stanford.edu

Sung-Yon received his Bachelors degrees in Biological Sciences and Chemistry from Seoul National University in South Korea in 2009. During the course of college he pursued research in the Korea Institute of Science and Technology, where he worked on electrical stimulation of the thalamus. Currently, Sung-Yon is in the Neurosciences Ph.D. Program at Stanford.

KELLY ZALOCUSKY
kellyz at stanford.edu

WERAPONG (JOE) GOO
wgoo at stanford.edu

EMILY FERENCZI
ferenczi at stanford.edu

Emily studied medicine at Cambridge and Oxford Universities in England and began her residency in neurology in London before coming to Stanford to do a PhD in Neuroscience in 2010. She is interested in combining optogenetics, electrophysiology and imaging techniques to study how the normal brain works and how it becomes disordered in neurological and neuropsychiatric disease.

ASLIHAN SELIMBEYOGLU
aslihans at stanford.edu

Aslihan received his Bachelors degree in Molecular Biology and Genetics from Istanbul Technical University. She then completed a masters in neurosciences, and arrived Stanford University as a visiting researcher before she joined to the neuroscience PhD program. She is interested in engineering new optogenetic tools and their use to study cognitive function.

CHRISTINA KIM
kimck at stanford.edu

Tina received an A.B. in Molecular Biology and a minor in Quantitative and Computational Neuroscience at Princeton University. She is currently in the Neurosciences Ph.D. Program at Stanford. She is interested in using optical measurements and perturbation of neuronal activity to study circuit dynamics in awake, behaving animals.

VANESSA BURNS
vburns at stanford.edu

Vanessa is part of the Chemical and Systems Biology PhD program at Stanford. She received a B.S. in Bioengineering from Caltech with a focus on Systems and Synthetic Biology.

Staff

CYNTHIA DELACRUZ - Executive Assistant
cdelacruz at stanford.edu

Research Assistants

CHARU RAMAKRISHNAN

SALLY PAK

ZHIQIANG CHEN

CHELSEY PERRY

JULIE MIRZABEKOV

SANDHIYA KALYANASUNDARAM

JOEL FINKELSTEIN

Undergrads

MINSUK HYUN

JENELLE WALLACE

ISAAC KAUVAR

Alumni

RAGHU YABALURI
M.S. 2005

NANDHINI NANDIWADA SANTHANAM
M.S. 2007

YUQING GONG
M.S. 2006

ED BOYDEN
POSTDOC 2005-2006

CATHY HAN
M.S. 2007

VICKI PARENTE
B.S. 2007

MYRIAM CORDEY
POSTDOC 2005-2006

ALBRECHT STROH
POSTDOC 2006-2007

ALEX ARAVANIS
POSTDOC 2006-2007

MANI ROY
SCIENTIST 2005-2007

ELLORA KARMARKER
UNDERGRAD 2005-2007

LESLIE MELTZER
GRAD STUDENT 2004-2008

FENG ZHANG
GRAD STUDENT 2004-2009

LIPING WANG
POST-DOC 2005-2007

JIN HUNG LEE
POST-DOC 2007-2009

RAAG AIRAN
GRAD STUDENT 2005-2009

RAMIN PASHAIE
POST-DOC 2007-2009

BRET SCHNEIDER
STAFF SCIENTIST 2006-2010

VIKAAS SOHAL
POST-DOC 2006-2010

RAGU VIJAYKUMAR
GRAD STUDENT 2006-2010

HANNAH BERNSTEIN
UNDERGRAD 2007-2010

HOSNIYA ZARABI
UNDERGRAD 2008-2010

MATT BRODSKY
UNDERGRAD 2009-2010

HSING-CHEN TSAI
GRAD STUDENT 2006-2010

POLINA ANIKEEVA
POST-DOC 2008-2010

MURTAZA MOGRI
GRAD STUDENT 2006-2011

REMY DURAND
GRAD STUDENT 2007-2011

ILKA DIESTER
POST-DOC 2008-2011

OFER YIZHAR
POST-DOC 2008-2011

KAY TYE
POST-DOC 2008-2011

DAVID LIN
POST-DOC 2010-2012

ILANA WITTEN
POST-DOC 2008-2012

ANSELM LEVSKAYA
POST-DOC 2009-2011

NANCY WANG
RESEARCH ASSISTANT 2011-2012

VIVIANA GRADINARU
GRADUATE STUDENT 2006-2010

KIM THOMPSON
POST-DOC 2007-2012

INBAL GOSHEN
POST-DOC 2008-2012

CHRIS LEE-MESSER
POST-DOC 2009-2012

DIVYA CHANDER
POST-DOC 2009-2012

CHRIS TOWNE
POST-DOC 2010-2012

RYAN SQUIRE
GRAD STUDENT 2008-2012


Deisseroth Lab • Stanford University • 318 Campus Drive West • Clark Center W080 • Stanford • California 94305