I'm an Oxford-based, British-Bangladeshi undergraduate medicine student working as a part-time software developer. My passion lies at the intersection of clinical practice and computation, exploring how their combined application can support the vulnerable, particularly the disabled community.

I began programming in 2019, with a focus in mobile app development, and grew to love machine learning, particularly its power in classifying time series data. In 2022, I wrote an electroencephalogram (EEG) classifier as part of an extended research project using recurrent neural networks in the context of supporting disabled communication. I later built an EEG visualisation tool for mobile and desktop, aiming to improve the accessibility of software capable of manipulating EEG data.

I joined Soft Pauer in 2023 as a software developer. I've lead the integration of native mobile technologies into an existing React mobile application, developing a watchOS application and Home Screen widgets for EventR.

Today, I'm developing a mobile application to help diagnose paediatric sepsis. This summer, I'm researching the applications of reinforcement learning in glucose homeostasis in the intensive care unit in the Computational Health Informatics Lab, Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford. At Soft Pauer, I continue to work on a suite of consumer event planning infrastructure applications, where my code is at the helm of large-scale logistics operations in motorsport.

I sing in Emmanuel College Chapel Choir, and row in my spare time.

Updated
7/18/2024