Synthetic Neurobiology Group

Ed Boyden, Ph.D., Principal Investigator

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Principal Investigator

  • Ed Boyden

Administration

  • Macey Lavoie

  • Lisa Lieberson

  • Doug Weston

  • Fira Zainal

Students Postdocs and Research Staff

  • Bobae An

  • Jenna Aronson

  • Nick Barry

  • Shahar Bracha

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  • Burcu Guner-Ataman

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  • Jordan Harrod

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  • Changyang Linghu

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  • Sadhana Lolla

  • Yangning Lu

  • Abigail Mauermann

  • Mitch Murdock

  • Hao Ni

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  • Gaojie Yang

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  • Ruihan Zhang

  • Jian-Ping Zhao

Visiting Scientists and Affiliates

  • Yosuke (Bandy) Bando

  • Emma Towlson

Alumni - Graduate Students Postdocs and Research Staff

  • Leah Acker

  • Kate Adamala

  • Brian Allen

  • Shahar Alon

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  • Shoh Asano

  • Michael Baratta

  • Barbara Barry

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  • Moshe Ben-Ezra

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  • Xue Han

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  • Grace Huynh

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  • Louis (Jeong Seuk) Kang

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  • Monique Kauke

  • Justin Kinney

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  • Nathan Klapoetke

  • Suhasa Kodandaramaiah

  • Mingjie Li

  • Charlotte Luff

  • Adam Marblestone

  • Daniel Martin-Alarcon

  • Azadeh Moini

  • Caroline Moore-Kochlacs

  • Masaaki Ogawa

  • Nikita Pak

  • Kiryl Piatkevich

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  • Xiaofeng Qian

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  • Fumi Yoshida

  • Jay (Chih-Chieh) Yu

  • Yongxin Zhao

  • Anthony Zorzos

Alumni - Visiting Scientists and Affiliates

  • Gary Brenner

  • David Dalrymple

  • Joel Dapello

  • Jun Deguchi

  • August Dietrich

  • Ophir Gaathon

  • Alik (Albert) Gerovitch

  • Vinay Gidwaney

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  • Nate Greenslit

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  • Al Strelzoff

  • Pablo Valdes Quevedo

  • Sarah Wertheimer

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  • Masahiro Yamaguchi

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Alumni - Undergraduate Researchers

  • Gilberto Abram

  • Jose Aceves

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  • Cinjon Resnick

  • Semon Rezchikov

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  • Shirin Shivaei

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  • Denzil Sikka

  • Ashutosh Singhal

  • Jon Spaulding

  • Jenna Sternberg

  • Eli Stickgold

  • William Stockton

  • Jerzy Szablowski

  • Augusto Tentori

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  • Max von Franque

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  • Jeremy Wohlwend

  • Evelyn Wong

  • Eunice Wu

  • Andrew Xue

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  • Anika Yasmin

  • Rin Yunis

Home » People » Principal Investigator » Ed Boyden

Ed Boyden

[Email: edboyden, followed by @mit.edu]  [Room: 46-2171C]  [Phone: 617 324 3085]

Ed Boyden is Y. Eva Tan Professor in Neurotechnology at MIT, an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the MIT McGovern Institute, and professor of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Media Arts and Sciences, and Biological Engineering at MIT. He leads the Synthetic Neurobiology Group, which develops tools for analyzing and repairing complex biological systems, such as the brain, and applies them systematically to reveal ground truth principles of biological function and to repair these systems. These inventions include optogenetic tools, which enable control of neural activity with light; expansion microscopy, which enables ordinary microscopes to do nanoimaging; new tools for high-speed imaging of living biological signals and networks; noninvasive brain stimulation strategies that may help with conditions ranging from Alzheimer's to blindness; and new strategies for inexpensively creating 3-D nanotechnology. He co-directs the MIT Center for Neurobiological Engineering, which aims to develop new tools to accelerate neuroscience progress, and is a faculty member of the MIT Center for Environmental Health Sciences, Computational & Systems Biology Initiative, and Koch Institute.

Amongst other recognitions, he has received the Wilhelm Exner Medal (2020), the Croonian Medal (2019), the Lennart Nilsson Award (2019), the Warren Alpert Foundation Prize (2019), the Rumford Prize (2019), the Canada Gairdner International Award (2018), the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences (2016), the BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award (2015), the Carnegie Prize in Mind and Brain Sciences (2015), the Jacob Heskel Gabbay Award (2013), the Grete Lundbeck Brain Prize (2013), the NIH Director's Pioneer Award (2013), and the Perl/UNC Neuroscience Prize (2011). He was named to the World Economic Forum Young Scientist list (2013) and the Technology Review World’s "Top 35 Innovators under Age 35" list (2006), and is an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences (2019), the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2017), the National Academy of Inventors (2017), and the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering (2018). His group has hosted hundreds of visitors to learn how to use new biotechnologies, and he also regularly teaches at summer courses and workshops in neuroscience, and delivers lectures to the broader public (e.g., TED (2011), TED Summit (2016), World Economic Forum (2012, 2013, 2016)).

Ed received his Ph.D. in neurosciences from Stanford University as a Hertz Fellow, working in the labs of Jennifer Raymond and Richard Tsien, where he discovered that the molecular mechanisms used to store a memory are determined by the content to be learned. In parallel to his PhD, as an independent side project, he co-invented optogenetic control of neurons, which is now used throughout neuroscience. Previously, he studied chemistry at the Texas Academy of Math and Science at the University of North Texas, starting college at age 14, where he worked in Paul Braterman's group on origins of life chemistry. He went on to earn three degrees in electrical engineering and computer science, and physics, from MIT, graduating at age 19, while working on quantum computing in Neil Gershenfeld's group. Long-term, he hopes that understanding how the brain generates the mind will help provide a deeper understanding of the human condition, and help humanity achieve a more enlightened state. His full CV is posted here.

Copyright 2006-present, Ed Boyden | Accessibility