Sandya Subramanian, a Johns Hopkins University senior from Grand Rapids, Mich., has won a scholarship from the Winston Churchill Foundation of the United States for graduate study at England's University of Cambridge.
The Churchill Scholarship is awarded annually to at least 14 students who have demonstrated a capacity to contribute to the advancement of knowledge in the sciences, engineering, or mathematics by completing original, creative work at an advanced level.
This is the fifth Johns Hopkins winner in four years.
Subramanian, who is majoring in biomedical engineering and applied math and statistics, hopes to become a computational neuroscience researcher, devising tools to help clinicians treating the brain.
For three years, Subramanian has worked in the lab of Sridevi V. Sarma, an assistant professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering's Institute for Computational Medicine. There she developed a tool to help doctors pinpoint the region of the brain responsible for seizures in people with epilepsy.
"Of all the undergraduate students I have supervised in research, Sandya is by far the most precocious, talented, hardworking, and diligent student—and this is significant given the talented student pool [of the university's BME program]," Sarma says. "There is no doubt in my mind that Sandya has a remarkable ability to be innovative and conduct original research that will have a high impact on the field of neuroscience, computational medicine, and patients suffering from epilepsy."
At Cambridge, Subramanian plans to continue exploring the brain through new research projects in the Department of Clinical Neurosciences. "It will be a first step for me as an independent researcher," she says. "This is an amazing opportunity that so few people get."
Subramanian has already spent summers in research programs at both MIT and the National Institutes of Health.
Donniell Fishkind, an associate research professor in the Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics at Johns Hopkins, recruited Subramanian to be one of his teaching assistants. He recalls one day when he unexpectedly missed a class session, Subramanian, undaunted, gave part of the lecture—to 130 students.
"Her quantitative background is unusually strong, she is very quick to grasp complex ideas, and she is also very clever," Fishkind says. "She is well-prepared for conducting serious research, and she has successfully started down that road."
While at Johns Hopkins, Subramanian performed for four years with the South Asian fusion a cappella group Kranti. A certified emergency medical responder in Maryland, she also volunteered with the 24/7 campus emergency response unit. Inventions that she helped create with fellow engineering students took first prize in 2013 at the Collegiate Inventors Competition and last year at the North American Professionals and Entrepreneurs Council Innovation Challenge.
The one-year scholarship pays all university and college fees (ranging from $33,500 to $37,600), a living allowance (ranging from $17,700 to $21,000), transportation to and from the United Kingdom (up to $1,100), student visa expenses ($500), a travel award of $500, and a possible special research grant of up to $2,000. Depending on the field of study, the scholarship is worth $57,000 to $63,600.