Engineering foundations
Aerospace training gave me the bones: dynamics, controls, modeling, and the habit of asking whether the system still works outside the clean diagram.
Academic spine
My training moves through aerospace engineering, clinical engineering, rehabilitation science, and biomedical engineering. The common thread is structure: taking a messy problem, framing it properly, then building something that can be tested in the real world.
Current role PhD Candidate in Biomedical Engineering at the University of Toronto.
Through-line Engineering rigor, clinical context, and assistive technology that earns its place in real life.
A University of Toronto path from first-principles engineering to rehabilitation technology and human-machine systems.
Aerospace training gave me the bones: dynamics, controls, modeling, and the habit of asking whether the system still works outside the clean diagram.
Clinical engineering and rehabilitation science moved the work closer to people, constraints, care pathways, recovery, and independence.