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Vikas Bhandawat, PhD

Vikas Bhandawat, PhD

Associate Professor
School of Biomedical Engineering, Science and Health Systems

Office: Bossone 602
Phone: 215.895.1959
Email: vikas.bhandawat@drexel.edu
Website:

Bio

A seemingly simple task such as walking to one鈥檚 favorite coffee shop involves behaviors that unfold on multiple timescales: On a short timescale (< 1 second), one must move one鈥檚 legs on an uneven surface and maintain balance. On a medium timescale (~ few seconds) one must walk relatively straight on a sidewalk. On a longer timescale (~ minutes), one has to follow the street signs to navigate.

The mission of my lab is to take an integrated approach to understand how behavior at these multiple timescales arises from the interaction between the brain, the body and the world. We have homed in on legged locomotion in Drosophila (or fruit flies) as a uniquely appropriate system for studying this problem. The advantage in using Drosophila is that instead of ~1010 neurons in the mammalian brain, they have just 105 neurons, making them more tractable. Moreover, the powerful genetic toolkit in Drosophila allow us to label, silence or activate individual neurons, enabling us to study the neural basis of locomotion with unparalleled specificity.

Our research program is highly interdisciplinary: We employ imaging techniques to dissect how neurons are connected to each other. We have developed techniques to measure electrical signals from single neurons in behaving flies to understand how they encode sensory information, make decisions and control actions. We have also developed behavioral paradigms to make a quantitative assessment of flies鈥 behavioral output. These experimental approaches are combined with computational approaches to understand the principles underlying neural computations on each of these multiple time scales.

Our multidisciplinary research also supports our educational objective: to create the next generation of professionals with a truly multidisciplinary skill set necessary to tackle complex, real-world problems.

Education and Positions Held

  • 2019-Present Associate Professor
     School of Biomedical Engineering, Science and Health Systems

  • 2010-2019 Assistant Professor
     Department of Biology and Duke Institute of Brain Sciences
     Duke University

  • 2005-2009 Postdoctoral Scholar
     Advisor: Prof. Rachel Wilson
     Harvard Medical School

  • 1999-2005 Graduate Student
     Advisor: Prof. King-Wai Yau
     Department of Neuroscience
     Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
     Baltimore, MD
     Thesis: Elementary Events Underlying Olfactory Transduction

  • 1993-1998 MS in Chemistry (Integrated BS and MS)
     Indian Institute of Technology
     Kanpur, India

Research Interests

Sensorimotor integration, whole-cell patch clamp and imaging in behaving animals, optogenetics, neuromechanics, locomotion.

Publications

  • G. Antoniak, T. Biswas & V. Bhandawat. 2019 鈥淪pring-loaded inverted pendulum goes through two contraction-extension cycles during the single stance phase of walking鈥 (bioRxiv 509687)
    Link: .

  • L.Tao, S. Ozarkar, J. Beck & V. Bhandawat. 2019 鈥淪tatistical structure of locomotion and its modulation by odors鈥. eLife 8:e41235
    Link:

  • C. Chun, T. Biswas & V. Bhandawat. 2018 鈥淜inematic and biomechanical analyses in Drosophila suggests that most legged locomotion in insects can be understood within a single framework.鈥 (bioRxiv 455246)
    Link: .

  • T. Biswas, S. Rao & V. Bhandawat. 2018 鈥淎 simple extension of inverted pendulum template to explain features of slow walking.鈥 Journal of Theoretical Biology 457, 112-123.
    Link:

  • C. Hsu & V. Bhandawat. 2016 鈥淥rganization of descending neurons in Drosophila.鈥 2016. Scientific Reports 6: 20259,
    Link: .

  • S.H. Jung, C. Hueston, V. Bhandawat. 2015. 鈥淥dor-identity dependent motor programs underlie behavioral responses to odors.鈥 eLife 4: e11092,.
    Link:

  • K. Tschida & V. Bhandawat. 2015. 鈥淎ctivity in descending dopaminergic neurons represents but is not required for leg movements in the fruit fly Drosophila.鈥 Physiological Reports 2015 3 (3), Article number: 12322. doi:10.14814/phy2.12322.
    Link:

  • V. Bhandawat, G. Maimon, M.H. Dickinson & R.I. Wilson. 2010. 鈥淥lfactory modulation of flight in Drosophila is sensitive, selective and rapid.鈥 Journal of Experimental Biology 213, 3625-3635.

  • S.R. Olsen*, V. Bhandawat* & R.I. Wilson. 2010 鈥淒ivisive normalization in olfactory population codes.鈥 Neuron 66(2):287-99.

  • V. Bhandawat, J. Reisert & K.-W. Yau. 2010. 鈥淪ignaling by olfactory receptor neuron near threshold.鈥 PNAS 2010 107(43): 18682-18687.

  • J.H Singer, E. Glowatzki , T. Moser , B.W. Strowbridge , V. Bhandawat , A.P. Sampath. 2009. 鈥淔unctional Properties of Synaptic Transmission in Primary Sense Organs.鈥 Journal of Neuroscience 29: 12802-12806.

  • V. Bhandawat, S.R. Olsen, M.L. Schlief, N. Gouwens & R.I. Wilson. 2007. 鈥淪ensory processing in the Drosophila antennal lobe increases separation between ensemble odor representations.鈥 Nature Neuroscience 10:1474-82.

  • S.R. Olsen*, V. Bhandawat* & R.I. Wilson. 2007. 鈥淓xcitatory interactions between olfactory processing channels in the Drosophila antennal lobe.鈥 Neuron 54:89-103.

  • V. Bhandawat, J. Reisert, K.-W Yau. 2005. 鈥淓lementary response of an olfactory receptor neuron to odorants.鈥 Science 2005, 308, 1931-1934.