Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Circulatronics and the curious case of SWEDs - Dr Subham Yadav
Description
đď¸â¨Â Welcome to Revise and Resubmit â the podcast where brilliant research meets real conversation! đđĄ
Todayâs episode is a đ Christmas Special đ â and weâre switching things up with a person-to-person interview format. Because what better way to unwrap ideas than by hearing them straight from the mind that created them?
đ Now, if youâve been following our journey, youâll remember that we previously covered the groundbreaking Nature Biotechnology paper on Circulatronics from Dr. Deblina Sarkarâs Lab at the MIT Media Lab. (đ Link to that episode will be in our show notes below!)
Spotify Episode link
A non-surgical Brain implant (Sarkar et al 2025)
https://open.spotify.com/episode/6NN93f3n7Q76gFK5uSYt8m?si=cb312d83597946ab
âYoutube Channel
â https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcherâ
Connect over linkedin
https://www.linkedin.com/in/mayukhpsm/
But today⌠weâre diving deeper â straight into the heart of the discovery itself. â¤ď¸âđĽ
đ§ Hosted by our very own producer â Mayukh Mukhopadhyay â this episode, titled âCirculatronics and the Curious Case of SWEDs,â brings us an extraordinary guest: Dr. Shubham Yadav â the first author of that Nature Biotech paper, a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute of Neuroinformatics, University and ETH Zurich. đ§ đ¨đ
Letâs get to know him a bit.
Dr. Yadav is a researcher whose curiosity doesnât just light up the lab â it builds new worlds of possibility. A dual-degree graduate in Electrical Engineering from IIT Kanpur, an S.M. in Media Arts and Sciences from MIT, and a recent PhD from the MIT Media Lab, heâs pioneering ways to make electronics circulate naturally through the body â no surgery, no wires, just innovation flowing with life itself.
His creation â Circulatronics â uses wireless, subcellular-scale photovoltaic devices that travel through the bloodstream, find neural inflammation, and settle right where treatment is needed. đ⨠Think of it as science fiction turning into biological poetry.
Now at ETH Zurich, heâs pushing this technology toward real-world neurotherapeutic applications â bridging brain, biology, and bytes.
đď¸ So today, we will take on a journey through Circulatronics, the intriguing universe of SWEDs, and the deeper question hiding beneath this invention.
đ What happens when technology stops being implanted â and starts becoming alive within us?
đ A huge thank you to Dr. Shubham Yadav, Dr. Deblina Sarkar, and the Nature Biotechnology team for their remarkable contribution to science â published in one of the most prestigious Nature Portfolio academic journals in the world.
And before we let curiosity take over â donât forget to â¨Â subscribe ⨠to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify, follow our YouTube channel âWeekend Researcherâ, and tune in on Amazon Prime or Apple Podcast for more caffeine-fueled deep dives into ideas that move the world. âđ
Because every discovery has a story â and every story deserves to beâŚÂ revised and resubmitted. đ§Š
Reference
Yadav, S., Lee, R. X., Kajale, S. N., Joy, B., Saha, M., Patel, P., Bull, L., Cao, S., Mitragotri, S., Bono, D., & Sarkar, D. (2025). A nonsurgical brain implant enabled through a cellâelectronics hybrid for focal neuromodul