I began college when I was 11, graduating from UC Berkeley with a bachelor's degree in cognitive science and computational modeling. I then became one of MIT’s youngest graduate students at 16 when I began my Ph.D. in computational neuroscience. My thesis was on the computations behind face identification, learning from the algorithms the human brain uses in order to improve computer vision models and advance artificial intelligence.
I left all of that to help found a company that could increase access to clinical trials and saves lives today and for generations to come. Since then our team has won a national pitch competition, awards from the pharmaceutical industry for patient centricity, raised venture capital from some of the top investors in Silicon Valley, and my co-founder and I were acknowledged in the Forbes 30 Under 30 class of 2018.
Describe the most impressive thing you've done.