Partha Mitra

American neuro- and computer scientist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Partha Pratim Mitra is an American neuroscientist, computer scientist and entrepreneur. He is the Crick-Clay Professor of Biomathematics at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.[1] Mitra holds the H.N. Mahabala Distinguished Chair in Computational Brain Research at IIT Madras[2][3] and he was a Senior Visiting Researcher at RIKEN, Tokyo, Japan.[4] In 2014, he founded Clarapath, with an aim to automate tissue sectioning in the clinical laboratory.[5][6]

Quick facts Alma mater, Known for ...
Partha Mitra
Alma materHarvard University, Presidency University, Kolkata
Known forNeural circuit
Computational Neuroscience
BRAIN Initiative
Brain Architecture Project
AwardsSenior Member, IEEE
HN Mahabala Distinguished Chair at IIT Madras
Fellow, American Physical Society
Crick-Clay Professor of Biomathematics at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Scientific career
FieldsNeuroscience
Statistical physics
Machine learning
Artificial intelligence
InstitutionsCold Spring Harbor Laboratory
IIT Madras
RIKEN
Bell Labs
Caltech
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Biography

Partha Mitra received his PhD in theoretical physics from Harvard University under the guidance of Bertrand Halperin in 1993.[7] He was a member of the Theoretical Physics Department at Bell Laboratories from 1993 to 2003, and an assistant professor in Theoretical Physics at Caltech from 1996 before moving to Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in 2003 where he is a Crick-Clay professor of biomathematics.[8][9] Professor Mitra also holds adjunct positions in the NYU School of Medicine[10] and Weill Cornell Medical College.[11][12]

Research

Mitra's research aims to study the complex biological systems from a “theoretical engineering” perspective.[13] He combines theoretical, computational and experimental approaches and currently understanding how brains work.[14][15][16] Professor Mitra initiated the idea of brain-wide mesoscale circuit mapping[17][18] and founded the Brain Architecture Project, including collaborations with RIKEN Brain Science Institute[19] and Monash University.[20][21][22] He has published over 240 research articles in peer-reviewed journals such as Nature, Science, PNAS, PRL[23] with an H-index of 70[24] and holds thirty-one U.S. patents.[25] He has also co-authored a book titled Observed Brain Dynamics published by the Oxford University Press[26] and has written pieces for Scientific American.[27]

References

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