Polina O. Anikeeva
Associate Director, Research Laboratory of Electronics
Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, Materials Sciences and Engineering ( Department of)
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Room 36-849
Cambridge, MA 02139
anikeeva@mit.edu
617.253.3301
Administrative Assistant
Cynthia J Higgins
Room 36-812
617.258.7348
chiggins@mit.edu
Polina Anikeeva is Associate Director of the Research Lab of Electronics, Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, and principal investigator in the Bioelectronics Group. Prof. Anikeeva is combining materials chemistry and nano- and micro-fabrication approaches to develop minimally invasive devices for neural recording, stimulation, and repair. She is interested in organic and nanostructured hybrid materials beyond traditional semiconductors as potential candidates for neuroprosthetic devices. Her lab focuses on engineering materials interfaces between neural tissues and electronic and optoelectronic devices in order to improve signal quality as well as biocompatibility of neural probes. The technology developed in her lab has potential applications in deep brain stimulation for Parkinson’s disease, major depressive disorder as well as brain-machine interfaces for paralyzed patients.
Prof. Anikeeva received her BS in Physics from St. Petersburg State Polytechnic University, Russia in 2003. Before starting graduate school she spent a year working in the Physical Chemistry Division at the Los Alamos National Lab. After receiving her PhD degree in Materials Science from MIT in January 2009, she completed a postdoctoral fellowship in Bioengineering at Stanford University. She joined the faculty of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering in July 2011 as AMAX career development assistant professor.
Keywords
bioelectronics, minimally invasive neuroprosthetics, neural interfaces, optoelectronics, nanotechnology
Group Websites
Related News Links
07.16.2024
Polina Anikeeva named head of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering
06.01.2022
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12.18.2020
Controlling drug activity with light
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A mechanical way to stimulate neurons
04.15.2020
Researchers achieve remote control of hormone release
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Selected Publications
10.16.2024
Magnetoelectric nanodiscs enable wireless transgene-free neuromodulation
07.20.2020
Magnetic Vortex Nanodiscs Enable Remote Magnetomechanical Neural Stimulation
08.20.2019
Remotely controlled chemomagnetic modulation of targeted neural circuits
03.31.2017
Flexible and stretchable nanowire-coated fibers for optoelectronic probing of spinal cord circuits
02.22.2017
One-step optogenetics with multifunctional flexible polymer fibers
09.29.2016
Magnetically Actuated Protease Sensors for in Vivo Tumor Profiling
09.29.2016
Magnetically Actuated Protease Sensors for in Vivo Tumor Profiling
09.29.2016
Magnetically Actuated Protease Sensors for in Vivo Tumor Profiling
09.29.2016
Magnetically Actuated Protease Sensors for in Vivo Tumor Profiling
09.29.2016
Magnetically Actuated Protease Sensors for in Vivo Tumor Profiling