Professor John P. Donoghue
John P.
Donoghue, Ph.D., M.S. is Professor of Neuroscience and Engineering
at Brown University
and Director of the Brown Institute for Brain Science.
John’s laboratory investigates how the brain turns thought into
voluntary
behaviors and how that knowledge can be used to help persons with
paralysis. He studies how populations of neurons represent and transform
information as a motor plan becomes movement. This approach has required
the creation of a novel recording array to study neural ensembles. With
the knowledge he has gained about movement representation, he has
translated his lab’s findings to a clinical application in which humans
with paralysis can use their neurons directly to control devices.
His papers include
Sensors for Brain–Computer Interfaces,
Connecting cortex to machines: recent advances in brain
interfaces,
Decoding 3D reach and grasp from hybrid signals in motor and premotor
cortices: spikes, multiunit activity, and local field
potentials,
Assistive technology and robotic control using motor cortex
ensemble-based neural interface systems in humans with
tetraplegia, and
Decoding Complete Reach and Grasp Actions from Local Primary Motor
Cortex Populations.
John earned his B.A. in Biology at Boston University in 1972.
He earned his M.S. in Anatomy at the University
of Vermont in 1976. He earned his Ph.D. in
Neuroscience at Brown University in 1979.
Watch
John Donoghue at Nobel Conference 47 and
Simons Science Series — John Donoghue.
Read
What Are the Best Scientists Working On? and
Connecting Brains to the Outside World.