Through my early graduate training in the Duke Psychology & Neuroscience PhD program, I have gained expertise in utilizing single-unit intracranial recordings to explore auditory perception, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to explore multisensory representations underlying object recognition and subsequent memory, and stereoelectroencephalography (sEEG) in a patient with musicogenic epilepsy. As I progress towards my dissertation phase, I am diving deeper into the neural firing patterns underlying segregation and grouping in the auditory cortex. 


Prior to the start of my graduate studies, I conducted research as an undergraduate at Duke in a variety of topics including, speech perception, auditory imagery, music and memory in individuals with dementia, and brain-computer interfaces for individuals suffering from severe paralysis.


Link to Recent Preprint: Exploring Auditory Category Distinctions in Perception and Imagery