Artificial intelligence is rapidly becoming a force multiplier for scientific discovery, biotechnology, and national competitiveness. My current work explores how AI can accelerate biological innovation while strengthening biosecurity, resilience, and responsible stewardship of emerging technologies.
For more than two decades, I have worked at the intersection of neuroscience, engineering, and computation. I continue to explore how advances in neurotechnology, artificial intelligence, and human-centered design can augment human capability and enable new forms of collaboration between people and machines.
Breakthrough technologies rarely succeed because of technical merit alone. I advise organizations on identifying emerging opportunities, building innovation portfolios, and translating scientific advances into real-world impact. Drawing on experience from government, industry, and academia, I focus on technologies that will shape the next decade of economic and national security.
The most important challenges ahead will require new ways of thinking across disciplines. I am particularly interested in the convergence of AI, biotechnology, advanced computing, and national resilience—and how these capabilities can be developed responsibly to improve human health, security, and prosperity.