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Rupesh Nandi
Rupesh Nandi
Independent researcher
Rupesh Nandi is a Class 10 student and independent researcher with a focused interest in medicine, artificial intelligence, neuroscience, and ethics. With four peer-reviewed, open-access research papers published on Zenodo, his work spans topics such as brain-computer interfaces, AI in healthcare, synthetic consciousness, and longevity science. He actively explores the intersection of biotechnology and digital systems, aiming to shape future applications in mental health, education, and ethical AI. Rupesh is also the creator of a speculative hybrid system known as TIMEBRON (Temporal-Integrated Memory & Emotion-Based Response Optimization Network). His long-term goal is to advance neuro-AI integration and post-human biotechnologies through transdisciplinary research. Beyond science, he is the author of a fantasy saga titled Chronoheart, blending myth, moral complexity, and speculative science fiction. ORCID and Zenodo serve as the central platforms for his academic contributions until formal institutional affiliation begins.
Kolkata, india

Public Documents 3
TIMEBRON: A Neuroadaptive Framework for Emotionally Aligned and Ethically Modulated A...
Rupesh Nandi

Rupesh Nandi

June 20, 2025
Author:Rupesh NandiIndependent ResearcherORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0003-0511-5296Email:  rupeshnandi330@gmail.comDate of Completion: June 10, 2025
Post-Human Biotechnologies: Toward Recursive Intelligence and Bio-Digital Identity
Rupesh Nandi

Rupesh Nandi

June 09, 2025
This paper explores the scientific, technological, and ethical dimensions of post-human biotechnologies interdisciplinary systems that integrate synthetic biology, gene editing, and artificial intelligence to enable symbiotic interaction between human DNA and machine intelligence. It investigates how AI-guided CRISPR systems, neuromorphic computing, and brain–machine interfaces may evolve into real-time bio-digital feedback loops, allowing for adaptive cognitive enhancement, emotional regulation, and programmable physiology. Drawing from current literature in genomics, neurotechnology, and AI ethics, the paper analyzes possible architectures for human–machine symbiosis and presents speculative models of bio-integrated consciousness. Emphasis is placed on the concept of “bio-cybernetic continuity,” where identity persists despite augmentation. Ethical challenges such as autonomy, consent, inequality, and post-human governance are critically examined. This study is intended for interdisciplinary audiences interested in future-oriented biotechnology, including researchers, philosophers, policy analysts, and emerging technologists. While speculative in nature, the work is grounded in current trends and aims to provoke dialogue about the limits of human enhancement and the responsibilities that come with designing sentient systems.
Slowing Time: The Science, Promise, and Ethics of Human Longevity (2014–2025)
Rupesh Nandi

Rupesh Nandi

June 10, 2025
Over the past decade, the science of aging has shifted from theory to tangible possibility. What once sounded like science fiction slowing, halting, or even reversing aging is now the subject of serious research. This paper explores key advances made between 2014 and 2025 in the field of human longevity, from gene-editing tools like CRISPR to senolytic drugs that target aging cells. It also examines the growing role of artificial intelligence in finding potential anti-aging compounds faster than traditional methods. But with progress come hard questions: Who will have access to these treatments? Should we extend life if quality of life isn’t guaranteed? And how might longer lifespans affect health systems, families, and society as a whole? By bringing together scientific breakthroughs and ethical reflections, this paper offers a grounded look at how close we are to reshaping the human lifespan and what that might mean for our future.

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