Along with her academic research, Maliha Ahmed is an accomplished teacher and is involved in community outreach and service to the university. She defies the caricature of the narrowly focused PhD. Ahmed’s research is in the field of computational neuroscience, where she investigates the thalamocortical system. She is working to create a computational tool that can simulate some of what happens in an actual human brain. “My PhD research is an extension of my master’s research,” said Ahmed. “In that project, I was working on a model for a cortical circuit to study childhood absence seizures. Now I’m looking at the role of hormones in the resolution of these absence seizures.” Before doing her master’s and then beginning a PhD, Ahmed became a certified teacher, completing a BEd at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE). Her teaching area was in physics and mathematics for junior high and high school students. She has continued her teaching and learning in graduate school, working as a teaching assistant and occasionally filling in for lectures. When asked what motivates her going forward, Ahmed pointed to inspirations within the Department of Applied Mathematics.
I see all these great scholars around me, like my supervisor Sue Ann Campbell. And like Anita Layton, Ghazal Geshnizjani, my committee members, and so many others in the department. I see their passion for what they do and their dedication to helping us grad students succeed. It’s very heartening. It motivates me to reach that level where I can give back in the same way.
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#GRADimpact showcases the stories of our graduate students who are making an impact in their fields of study, communities, workplaces and the world.