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      • He was a highly influential advocate of classical liberalism in India and was President of the Indian Economic Association and a member of the Mont Pelerin Society.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bellikoth_Raghunath_Shenoy
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  2. Feb 21, 2017 · After becoming an assistant professor at Stanford in 2001, Shenoy devoted his research to answering that question. He recorded neural activity from hundreds of neurons at the same time while monkeys, whose brains are quite similar to human brains, performed a variety of arm and hand movement tasks.

  3. Bellikoth Ragunath Shenoy (1905–1978) was an Indian classical liberal economist. He was a highly influential advocate of classical liberalism in India and was President of the Indian Economic Association and a member of the Mont Pelerin Society .

  4. M. R. SHENOY received the M. Sc. in Physics in 1979 from Mysore University and the Ph.D. in the field of Fiber and Integrated Optics from IIT Delhi in 1987. He joined the faculty of IIT Delhi in 1988, where he is currently a Professor of Physics, working in the area of fiber and integrated optics.

  5. Articles 1–20. ‪Stanford and Howard Hughes Medical Institute‬ - ‪‪Cited by 30,844‬‬ - ‪Motor and Computational Neuroscience‬ - ‪Neuroengineering‬ - ‪Brain-Computer Interfaces‬ - ‪Neurotechnology‬.

  6. Aug 16, 2021 · Aug 16, 2021 · 8 min read. Last Friday, NeuroCollege had the honor of hosting Dr. Krishna Shenoy as part of our ongoing speaker series. Dr. Shenoy is an American neuroscientist and...

  7. Jan 27, 2023 · Krishna Shenoy, engineer who reimagined how the brain makes the body move, dies at 54. Shenoy was a pioneer of neuroprosthetics, a field that paired chips implanted in the brain with algorithms able to decipher the chatter between neurons, allowing people with paralysis to control computers and mechanical limbs with their thoughts. January 27, 2023

  8. Jan 27, 2023 · Shenoy completely redefined scientific understanding of motor neurons, leading to a fundamental re-thinking of how the brain creates movement. In recent years, dissatisfied with existing models, Shenoy had begun to remap the human motor cortex.