This page elaborates the Who Will and Will Not Thrive Here section on the homepage. The lab benefits from heterogeneous trainee backgrounds and selects deliberately for fit between the trainee's interests and the lab's actual research program.
Trainees from biology, engineering, physics, applied math, and computational backgrounds have all done well in the lab. The lab actively supports converts from quantitative fields who are new to neuroscience, and the cross-modality training program is designed to bring trainees up to speed in unfamiliar techniques during the first year.
Specific backgrounds that map well to the lab include:
• Biomedical engineering with strong cellular biology coursework
• Neuroscience with quantitative or computational training
• Physics or applied math, with interest in biological systems
• Cell biology or molecular biology, with interest in in vivo systems
• Electrical engineering with biology coursework
• Computer science with neuroscience or biology research experience
The lab is not the right fit for trainees whose primary interest is descriptive immunohistochemistry of foreign body response without paired in vivo functional readout, terminal histology as a primary endpoint rather than as a validation step, or device fabrication and electrode design without the underlying tissue biology. The field has moved beyond descriptive characterization of glial scarring as a primary scientific question, and the lab's training program reflects that shift.
Trainees in those interest areas are likely to find better fit elsewhere, and the lab does both the trainee and itself a service by stating this directly during the application process.
Pitt has a deep neural engineering ecosystem, and the B.I.O.N.I.C. Lab partners closely with several adjacent programs. Prospective trainees whose interests fit better elsewhere should consider:
• Dr. Tracy Cui's lab, for trainees focused on electrode and device design and materials
• Drs. Jennifer Collinger and Robert Gaunt, for trainees focused on human BCI clinical research and rehabilitation engineering
• Dr. Alberto Vazquez, for trainees focused on neurovascular coupling and functional imaging in rodent preparations
The B.I.O.N.I.C. Lab is the right home for trainees whose questions live in the cellular and vascular biology that determines whether those devices and human BCIs ultimately succeed or fail, and who want to develop the multi-modal in vivo skill set that crosses between basic mechanism and translation.
Before applying, prospective trainees may find the following self-assessment useful.
• Read 2 to 3 recent papers from the Recent Findings or Full Publication List pages. Were the basic biology findings interesting independent of the device context?
• Read the Why BCIs Fail Substack series. Does the failure-mode framing match how you think about scientific problems?
• Read the Forward and Reverse Translation page. Does the bidirectional structure match how you want to do science?
• Identify 1 or 2 projects on the Full Project Descriptions page that you would want to work on, and articulate why your background prepares you for them.
Trainees who can answer all four self-assessment questions affirmatively are likely to thrive in the lab. The application materials (one-page statement for postdocs, statement of purpose for graduate applicants) should make these answers visible to the PI and to the rotation mentor.