About

Who is behind this?

A Mechatronics and Biomedical Engineering student at Kyambogo University in Kampala, Uganda - building TSB around the science he finds most fascinating.

Why The Science Blueprint exists.

My name is Marvin Ngabonzira. I am a Mechatronics and Biomedical Engineering student at Kyambogo University in Kampala, Uganda.

I have been fascinated by science since I was old enough to pull books on planets off a library shelf. Physics pulled me in during high school. The brain never really let go. BCIs are where those two things finally made sense together: the engineering of human-machine interfaces, the signal processing, the architecture of systems that read and write to the most complicated structure in the known universe.

The Science Blueprint started because I kept talking about this stuff to anyone who would listen, and the response was always the same: you make this sound exciting. That is the job now. Science I love, in the domain I find most fascinating, in a language that makes it accessible to everyone who is genuinely curious.

How The Blueprint is organised

01 | Platform
The Signal
Science communication about neurotech, BCIs, and brain-machine engineering. YouTube for the big ideas. Substack for the full cited depth. LinkedIn for one focused technical insight a week.
02 | Research
The Archive
TSB's academic face. Technical reports, framework documents, and research papers. Published with DOIs and permanently free to read, share, and cite. We publish when genuine research exists - not to fill a schedule.
03 | Products
TSB Products
Tools, guides, and resources built from real study and real work in this field. Nothing sold here is something we have not tested, applied, or personally validated. Browse Products ->

The Founder

Marvin Mmembe Ngabonzira

Marvin Mmembe Ngabonzira

Founder | The Science Blueprint

Background Mechatronics and Biomedical Engineering - third year
Current work A-MDRM BCI classifier - motor-imagery EEG under noise, using Riemannian geometry
Focus areas Brain-computer interfaces | Neural data privacy | Assistive technology | Neuroengineering in low-resource settings
Published 2 open-access works - Zenodo | DOI-linked

I have been fascinated by science since I was old enough to pull books on planets off a library shelf. Physics pulled me in during high school. The brain never really let go.

BCIs are where those two things finally made sense together: the engineering of human-machine interfaces, the signal processing, the architecture of systems that read and write to the most complicated structure in the known universe.