Graduate School of Education


Showing 21-32 of 32 Results

  • Tuomas Vesterinen

    Tuomas Vesterinen

    Postdoctoral Scholar, Education

    BioTuomas Vesterinen is a philosopher of science specialized in psychiatry and ethics of artificial intelligence with additional interests in philosophy of mind and anthropology. His interdisciplinary research at Stanford focuses on the ethical, conceptual and social consequences that arise when employing artificial intelligence in psychiatry and mental healthcare organizations. His dissertation in philosophy “Socializing Psychiatric Kinds” (University of Helsinki, 2023) is on the role of social factors and non-epistemic values in the classification and explanation of psychiatric disorders.

    Tuomas is affiliated with the Scandinavian Consortium for Organizational Research (SCANCOR) and the anthropology department. He’s also a member of the Robophilosophy, AI Ethics and Datafication (RADAR) research group and the Centre for Philosophy of Social Science (TINT) at the University of Helsinki. (https://researchportal.helsinki.fi/en/persons/tuomas-vesterinen)

  • Ge "Tiffany" Wang

    Ge "Tiffany" Wang

    Postdoctoral Scholar, Education

    BioI am an HAI postdoctoral fellow at the Stanford Socially Augmented Learning Technologies (SALT) Lab under the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI), working with Professor Roy Pea. My research focuses on the intersection of human-computer interaction (HCI), human-centered artificial intelligence (HAI), and usable security and privacy, with a special emphasis on vulnerable populations like children, teenagers, and other marginalised communities.

  • Karen D. Wang

    Karen D. Wang

    Postdoctoral Scholar, Education

    BioMy research is situated at the intersection of machine learning and human cognition. In my work, I apply learning analytics and data mining techniques to students’ interaction data in technology-based learning environments. The goal is to translate fine-grained behavioral data into meaningful evidence about students’ cognitive and metacognitive processes. These enhanced understandings of students’ mental processes and competencies are then used to guide the design of and evaluate instructional materials embedded in educational technology.

  • Benjamin Xie

    Benjamin Xie

    Postdoctoral Scholar, Education

    BioPostdoctoral Fellow with the Stanford Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) Group and Graduate School of Education.
    I design tools for critical interactions with data. My current projects relate to data literacy for environmental advocacy, AI-assisted assessment design, and critical AI evaluation.
    I engage in the fields of computing education, human-computer interaction, and AI Ethics.
    In fall 2025, I will start as an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at the University of Denver.

  • Tiffany (Qianru) Yang

    Tiffany (Qianru) Yang

    Postdoctoral Scholar, Education

    BioTiffany is a postdoctoral fellow with the Stanford Impact Labs postdoctoral fellowship program. She received her Ph.D. in education from the Harvard Graduate School of Education in 2024, concentrating in Human Development, Learning and Teaching, along with a Secondary Field in Data Science from the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. Prior to her doctoral training, she received a B.A. in psychology from the University of Washington, Seattle, and an Ed.M. in human development and psychology from Harvard University. Tiffany’s research examines how early experiences influence children’s cognitive development and learning, with a particular focus on the role of the home environment and family interactions. This work aims to identify culturally situated factors that support the development of foundational cognitive skills in early to middle childhood, especially among underrepresented populations.

  • Paul Youngmin Yoo

    Paul Youngmin Yoo

    Postdoctoral Scholar, Education

    BioPaul Youngmin Yoo is a postdoctoral scholar at Stanford University. He studies how schools and policies shape opportunities to inform what we do about child poverty and educational inequality. He is an IES (Institute of Education Sciences) postdoctoral fellow at the Stanford Center on Early Childhood and was a National Academy of Education/Spencer Foundation dissertation fellow.