Sharanya Sriram

Sharanya Sriram graduated with a BS in molecular and cell biology from the University of California San Diego (UCSD) in 2024. As an undergraduate, she conducted research on the immune environment of pancreatic islets in diet-induced obesity and also completed a senior honors thesis on ribosomal protein differences in alpha and beta cells to investigate stress susceptibility in diabetes pathogenesis. Her global health work includes volunteering with street medicine teams to serve refugee communities in Tijuana, Mexico, and participating in the CATALYST program with the UCSD Bioregional Center, wherein she worked with agricultural leaders, indigenous activists, and policy experts to study how climate-related urban challenges impact community health across the U.S.-Mexico border. Sharanya has also studied in Bali, Indonesia, where she examined how indigenous Balinese healing traditions are integrated with allopathic medicine. Her interests span global perspectives on illness, community-oriented climate justice and resilience, and narrative storytelling.

As a Fulbright-Nehru scholar, Sharanya is conducting a qualitative ethnographic study across diverse clinical sites in Bengaluru, India, to examine how perceptions of social support in diabetes management are shaped by gender roles, rural–urban contexts, and beliefs in Ayurvedic medicine. Her research seeks to enhance cross-cultural understanding of the holistic and psychosocial dimensions of chronic disease care, and inform the development of tools to help healthcare providers assess and integrate social support into individualized treatment plans involving culturally informed medical practices.

Rachel Sondgeroth

Rachel Sondgeroth is an interdisciplinary scholar and professional in interreligious engagement. She recently received her master’s degree in religion from the Union Theological Seminary, an affiliate of Columbia University. Her research interests include the sociology of religion, methodology studies, and more specifically, faith-based approaches to organizing community service. She also studies how religious communities mobilize to strengthen their communities through both internal and interfaith initiatives.

For the past nine years, Rachel has been working on bringing diverse communities together to talk, listen, and connect. During both her BA and MA programs, she led interreligious initiatives, programs, and student organizations. Later, she worked for three years for the Arizona State University’s Project Humanities initiative, supporting the research of Dr. Neal Lester and facilitating events on topics such as religion and gender justice in an effort to dispel myths on religious doctrines and dogma; she was also part of intercultural seminars of the project. At the Union Theological Seminary, Rachel studied justice issues pertaining to interreligious diversity in the United States. Outside of interreligious engagement, she is working towards learning more about indigenous traditions, folk practices, and place-based spiritualities in the American Southwest.

Rachel’s Fulbright-Nehru project is conducting research exploring the methodologies, outcomes, and cultural norms around organizing faith-based community service projects in Mumbai, Maharashtra. Through case studies, interviews, and surveys, the research is cataloging the methods of faith-based service initiatives in Mumbai and quantifying their successes and challenges. By studying these practices, she is hoping to gain insights that will help improve their efficacy. The intended outcome of the project is the mobilization of millions of people to serve their communities, thereby fostering peace and unity among them.

Siddarth Seenivasa

Siddarth Seenivasa is a clinical research coordinator and biostatistician at Massachusetts General Hospital, where he contributes to neuroimaging and proteomics research focused on eating disorders, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Syndrome (PANS). Siddarth’s academic foundation includes a double major in biology (molecular genetics) and mathematics from the University of Rochester. He holds a master’s in biostatistics from Boston University, where he also investigated the intersection of mental health, bullying, and neuroimmune disorders. Siddarth’s research interests encompass psychiatry, neuroimmunology, and computational biology, with a particular focus on immune system dysfunctions in pediatric populations. He has developed statistical models to examine neurobiological differences across patient populations, most recently patenting a model to distinguish between PANDAS (Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated with Streptococcal Infections), OCD, and various eating disorders; this model is currently awaiting validation from a larger cohort. Siddarth has authored and co-authored publications on neuroinflammation, including his latest work exploring estrogen’s role in the mesolimbic pathway in women with eating disorders. He has also presented his research at academic conferences, such as at the Digestive Disease Week and to that of the Society of Behavioral Medicine. Siddarth plans to begin his MD-PhD journey upon returning to the U.S., with the goal of further integrating clinical practice and psychiatric research to deepen the understanding about mental health and neuroimmune disorders.

Siddarth’s nine-month Fulbright-Nehru project is seeking to develop a culturally adaptive screening tool for Indian youth to identify PANDAS, a condition for which no such tool currently exists. Toward this, he is working with Dr. Suvarna Jyothi at Sri Ramachandra Medical College, Chennai, and conducting clinical interviews to evaluate the eating habits, medical history, and mental health of at-risk adolescents. The objective is to create a diagnostic tool that incorporates the sociocultural nuances of Indian youth, thereby facilitating early intervention and addressing the underdiagnosis of PANDAS due to limitations of Western diagnostic methods.

Jasmine Sears

Originally from Atlanta, Georgia, Jasmine Sears moved to Los Angeles to study environmental studies at the University of Southern California (USC) in 2017. While a student, she worked at various fashion companies, thereby developing a passion for and expertise in sustainability in the textile sector. She has also served as the vice president of USC’s Fashion Industry Association and as the Fashion & Aesthetic director for the school’s Black Student Assembly. In order to develop an international perspective on issues of commerce and the environment, Jasmine conducted research in China on global consumer culture through USC’s Global East Asian Studies Center. She graduated from USC in December 2020.

Jasmine has been working at Google since 2021. There, she helps organize weekly climate talks for Anthropocene, the company’s climate interest group. She has participated in Audubon’s Coastal Leadership Program, where she completed a capstone research project on Black Angelenos’ relationships with the Los Angeles coast and birding.

Jasmine’s Fulbright-Nehru research project is examining the opportunity to expand the adoption of wastewater treatment practices across India’s textile sector in order to improve water quality and economic, social, and environmental outcomes. She is analyzing local industry conditions in Mumbai and Tirupur, and interviewing textile company wastewater treatment leaders to develop scalable frameworks which non-compliant textile businesses can follow in determining how to manage their effluent output.

Lenya Schmidt-Neuhaus

Lenya Schmidt-Neuhaus holds a chemistry and environmental justice degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her academic and professional interests relate to sustainability. Lenya works in consulting – earlier in transportation planning, now in the clean energy space. As a deputy project manager dealing with energy advisory and environmental, social, and governance services, she manages projects that help clients to reduce their emissions and access cleaner energy. She also conducts policy analyses in this field. Lenya seeks to leverage this experience of analyzing policies and managing project flows to conduct research.

Lenya’s Fulbright-Nehru project is studying the PFAS that are found in common household products. Prolonged and repetitive exposure to these chemicals can lead to a variety of negative health effects. The research will provide policy recommendations to limit exposure to PFAS, provide existing policy examples that can be used as a starting point to draft PFAS regulations, and identify which key actors have the influence to make changes to the supply chains.

Elijah Roggen

Elijah Roggen is a 2025 graduate of Pomona College, where he received his BA in politics and religious studies. At Pomona, he won the Stauffacher Thesis Prize in Religious Studies. He is especially interested in the confluence of religious and modern political narratives in the Jewish context. Elijah has spent time as a summer camp counselor and programming director, as a reading tutor, a disaster relief volunteer, and as an elementary school classroom assistant. He grew up in Arlington, Virginia.

Elijah’s Fulbright-Nehru project is exploring the nuances of political identity among India’s Jewish communities, particularly the Bene Israel community in the decades preceding and following Indian independence. The project emerges from an interest in family history – Elijah’s grandfather is a Bene Israel Jew born in Fort Kochi and raised in Mumbai. Through interviews and archival work, the project is seeking to fill a gap in the literature by considering the seemingly opposed political positions of Bene Israel individuals in the late colonial era and various forms of political dissent.

Rajat Ramesh

Rajat Ramesh graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a degree in biochemistry and history. Committed to the study of both science and social impact, Rajat has conducted diverse research across biomedical science and public history – from developing chemical tools to study post-translational modifications under Dr. George Burslem to investigating the legacy of redlining and urban renewal with Dr. Brent Cebul. Rajat has led efforts within the Guatemala Health Initiative, supporting clinic operations at Hospitalito Atitlán and conducting field research to inform sustainable health interventions. He has also served as a patient care assistant at the Center for Surgical Health, helping patients access essential surgical services. Besides, he has coordinated STEM outreach through the Netter Center’s Moelis Access Science program. His community engagement includes volunteering with children with cerebral palsy and providing clinical services at a student-run clinic for homeless populations. A recipient of the Martin Wolfe Prize and the College Alumni Society’s undergraduate research grant, Rajat is currently a postbaccalaureate fellow at the NIH Vaccine Research Center, where he investigates HIV persistence under antiretroviral therapy using single-cell sequencing technologies.

Rajat’s Fulbright-Nehru project is investigating how electronic health record (EHR) systems can improve tuberculosis (TB) reporting in southern India, where communities face significant barriers to care and treatment adherence. The study is assessing the implementation of open-source EHRs in both rural and urban healthcare settings. Through semi-structured interviews with healthcare providers, it is exploring cultural, behavioral, and technical barriers – such as stigma and confidentiality concerns – that affect EHR effectiveness. This mixed-methods research aims to identify scalable solutions to enhance TB surveillance and reporting in resource-constrained regions of India.

Shreya Pujari

Shreya Pujari is a vocalist, educator, and music industry professional specializing in folk music, jazz, and global traditions. She graduated from Berklee College of Music with a BM in Mediterranean music and contemporary writing and production, after beginning her studies in jazz voice at Fullerton College in Los Angeles. Her work centers on preserving and promoting traditional music through performance, education, and cross-cultural collaborations. Her multicultural education and fieldwork experience, including a six-month residency in Valencia, Spain, studying flamenco and Mediterranean music, inform her diverse musical approach and research interests.

Shreya has led several initiatives aimed at celebrating and sustaining global folk traditions. In 2024, she coordinated and directed the first Assamese Youth Orchestra in the U.S., commissioning new arrangements of Assamese folk songs and premiering the ensemble in Nashville. She has received a U.S. Congressional Certificate of Special Recognition for her work preserving Assamese cultural identity among first-generation youth in America. She is an active performer in the San Francisco music scene, known for curating eclectic, multilingual sets that introduce global folk traditions to American audiences.

Shreya’s Fulbright-Nehru research project is centering on the music of underrepresented communities, especially within her Assamese heritage. Her study is documenting the indigenous musical traditions of the Mising and Rabha tribes of Assam, India. Through immersive fieldwork, she is studying Mising and Rabha musical structures, performance practices, and cultural contexts. The focus of the project is on ethical preservation through consent-based storytelling and community partnership, aiming to give agency to cultural knowledge holders while also highlighting the global relevance of Assam’s musical landscape. Her research is expected to result in a multimedia documentary and supplemental educational resources aimed at preserving these traditions and increasing their visibility within the global academic community. Overall, backed by her background in folk music, ethnomusicology, and marketing, Shreya is attempting to showcase underrepresented traditions and foster cross-cultural understanding through global platforms such as festivals, film, and media.

Pirawat Punyagupta

Putt Punyagupta graduated from Yale University with a BA in history and South Asian studies. A two-time U.S. State Department critical language scholar, he is proficient in Chinese, Hindi, Lao, Persian, Prakrit, Sanskrit, Tamil, Thai, and Urdu, and is presently learning Bengali and Russian. He has worked for Yale’s Program in Iranian Studies as well as the Yale Poorvu Center for Teaching and Learning. He has also conducted research for the Stimson Center, a U.S. nonprofit that aims to enhance international peace and security through analysis and outreach. Besides, he has taken part in symposia at the Israel Institute for Advanced Studies. Putt has also supported heritage conservation activities. Prior to Fulbright, he was an open-source analyst in Washington, D.C.

Putt’s Fulbright-Nehru project is studying the history of delimitation in India. It is investigating the process’ original design elements while examining the intentions of past delimitation commissions and their attempts to ensure neutrality. It is also studying the responses of political parties and rationales behind the federal- and state-level freezes that took place in 1971 and 2002. The project is primarily relying on archival materials housed in Delhi, but is also consulting collections in relevant regional centers such as Chennai and Mumbai. Overall, the project aims to shed light on the underlying architecture that sustains India’s vibrant democracy.

Vedha Penmetcha

Vedha Penmetcha earned her bachelor’s degree in sports medicine and exercise physiology, with minors in global health technologies and medical humanities, along with a Spanish language certificate, from Rice University, Texas. Her passions lie at the intersection of medicine, social justice, and innovation.

Vedha’s global health design work is complemented by public health research. As a Stanford CARE research scholar, she evaluated racial and ethnic disparities in national breast cancer trends and advanced care planning, leading to presentations at national and international conferences. Inspired by these experiences, she began working with the International Health Systems Group at the University of Cambridge, where she is currently evaluating data-set diversity in health technologies.

Outside of research, Vedha is deeply committed to social justice. She has designed and led social justice programs on healthcare access. These experiences motivated her work as a Community Bridges Research Fellow, where she partnered with the Tahirih Justice Center to co-develop a mental health resource map tool for immigrant survivors of domestic violence.
Outside of her professional work, Vedha finds joy in movement and creativity. Trained in Bharatanatyam, she has been part of competitive Bollywood fusion and hip-hop dance teams in college. She also enjoys drawing, spending time with family and friends, and photography.

Vedha’s Fulbright-Nehru project is evaluating South Asia’s largest clinical breast examination (CBE) program launched by the Ushalakshmi Breast Cancer Foundation, Hyderabad, India. It is specifically looking at CBE performed by trained community health workers as a promising alternative to the high-cost mammography test.