Sarthak Chandra

Emergent Dynamics of
Thought

PhD, University of Maryland

Murty Science Fellow, 2025

Dr. Sarthak Chandra uses mathematics and physics to decode how the brain organizes thought. His research explains how structure and function emerge together in neural circuits, how a developing brain builds internal maps of space and experience, and how those patterns enable learning and memory. Working at the intersection of theoretical neuroscience, nonlinear dynamics, and machine learning, he uncovers principles by which networks, natural or artificial, learn to compute.

By treating the brain as a dynamical system, Dr. Chandra looks for simple, universal rules for how we learn and remember. His work on grid cells, the brain’s built-in GPS, showed how just a few basic developmental principles can give rise to the brain’s striking modular structure. His 2025 Nature papers showed how these grid-cell modules form in the first place and how modular circuits prevent catastrophic forgetting — ideas now inspiring new approaches in AI.

Returning from MIT,  Dr. Chandra brings theoretical tools that connect neuroscience to with diverse fields including complex systems, nonlinear dynamics, statistical physics, and topology. At the International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS) in Bangalore, Dr. Chandra is establishing a research group that blends theory, computation, and neuroscience as part of a new generation of Indian scientists linking physics with the biology of cognition. 

Website

Academic Training

Postdoctoral Research
Lisa Yang Integrative Computational Neuroscience Center 
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences
Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Mentor: Professor Ila Fiete

Doctoral Studies
University of Maryland | PhD in Physics
Advisors: Professors Edward Ott and Michelle Girvan

Selected Honors

MIT School of Science Infinite Expansion Award (2024)
Ralph Myer and Friends of Physics Teaching Award
Director’s Gold Medal, IIT Kanpur
Kishore Vaigyanik Protsahan Yojana Scholar