School of Engineering
Showing 501-600 of 918 Results
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Pete Mahowald
Adjunct Lecturer, Electrical Engineering
BioInterests include wireless communication systems like those found in IoT and satellites, especially in the context of the student technology clubs. These clubs can support the curriculum, host career exploration and experiment with the wise application of AI in lab engineering. Of current interest is SMesh which uses LoRa Mesh Networking, the SAMWISE satellite testing, and classes such as EE156 (PCBs), EE133 (radio components), EE186 (embedded processors) and the AA capstone class for satellites. Experience in high volume and contract design and manufacturing at HP and Apple.
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Ernestine Fu Mak
Administrative Associate 2, Civil and Environmental Engineering
BioDr. Ernestine Fu Mak is Co-Director of FTL (Frontier Technology Lab), an initiative of the Stanford School of Engineering and Doerr School of Sustainability. She has taught interdisciplinary courses across engineering and medicine: Frontier Technology - Understanding and Preparing for Technology in the Next Economy, Design and Innovation for the Circular Economy, Autonomous Vehicles Studio, Entrepreneurship Through the Lens of Venture Capital, and Silicon Valley and the U.S. Government.
She is the Founder of Brave Capital. Over the past decade, she has worked across the startup ecosystem, negotiating mergers and acquisitions, organizing SPVs for later-stage companies, angel investing in and advising startups that have since been acquired, and advising banks on venture debt. She began her career at ALP, where she guided founders as they navigated the journey to product-market fit and scaled their businesses and teams. She was recognized on the inaugural Forbes Magazine 30 Under 30 list, Vanity Fair Next Establishment list, and Business Insider Silicon Valley 100 list. She is a Kauffman Fellow and Eisenhower Fellow.
She is a strong advocate for active citizen participation in our democracy. She co-authored “Civic Work, Civic Lessons” with former Stanford Law School Dean Thomas Ehrlich to encourage civic engagement. She also co-authored “Renewed Energy” with IPCC major contributor John Weyant to guide government policy and investment strategies for a sustainable future. She has served as a board director and advisor to nonprofits such as Ad Council, California 100, and Presidio Institute.
She completed her B.S., M.S., MBA, Ph.D., and postdoc at Stanford University. Graduating with Tau Beta Pi and Phi Beta Kappa honors, she was awarded the Kennedy Prize for the top undergraduate thesis in engineering and the Terman Award as one of the top thirty graduating seniors in engineering. Her doctoral thesis focused on human operator and autonomous vehicle interactions with system bias and transitions of control. She is an inventor on numerous granted or in-process technology patents.
She is a proud part of a military family. -
Holly McCall
Program Manager, Management Science and Engineering - Technology Ventures Program
Current Role at StanfordProgram Manager STVP
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Angela McIntyre
Academic Prog Prof 3, Program-Bao Z.
Current Role at StanfordAngela McIntyre is the Executive Director of the Stanford Wearable Electronics (eWEAR) Initiative. She manages the eWEAR affiliates program and provides member companies opportunities to connect with research and events related to wearables at Stanford University. As a primary contact to eWEAR, Angela fosters membership, assists in forming collaborations between industry and faculty, leads eWEAR events, and is an evangelist for wearables research at Stanford.
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Eileen McNamara
Research Program Manager, Program-Skylar-Scott, M.
Current Role at StanfordResearch Program Coordinator
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Jeannie Meyer
Associate Director of Events, School of Engineering - External Relations
Current Role at StanfordPlan and coordinate donor relations, alumni relations and student outreach activities for the Dean's office in the School of Engineering.
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Bennet Meyers
Adjunct Professor, Electrical Engineering
BioI am a Staff Scientist with SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, in the Grid Integration Systems and Mobility (GISMo) Lab in the Applied Energy Division. I completed my PhD in Electrical Engineering at Stanford University in Winter 2023, advised by Prof. Stephen Boyd. We recently wrote a book on signal decomposition, which can be found under my publications tab. More info available on my personal website.
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Anjney Midha
Adjunct Lecturer, Computer Science
BioVisiting Scientist, Applied Physics
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Pedram Mokrian
Lecturer
Instructor, Stanford Engineering Center for Global and Online EducationBioPedram Mokrian is Adjunct Professor at Stanford University and a lecturer at the Haas School of business at UC Berkeley where he teaches and advises entrepreneurs and global 1000 companies alike on entrepreneurship, business model disruption, and technology innovation strategy. He was previously a Principal at Mayfield, one of Silicon Valley’s most storied venture capital firms, where he was part of the investment team with over $3.5B assets under management. Mokrian is a founding Partner of the Ratio Academy, New Line Ventures. He also serves as a mentor or advisor to a number of start-ups, innovation incubators, including Global Innovation Catalyst, the Texas Medical Center Innovation Center, Innovation Labs, MISO, and Moog, and serves on the advisory board of Phillips66.
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Joseph Fitzpatrick Moore, P.E.
Adjunct Lecturer, Civil and Environmental Engineering
BioMember, State Bar of California; Registered California Professional Civil Engineer; Fellow, American College of Construction Lawyers; Past Chair, International Bar Associaton, International Construction Projects Commitee; Board Member, International Constructon Law Alliance. Partner, Hanson Bridgett, LLP. Joseph is a dual qualified lawyer and civil engineer. His law practice focuses on complex domestic and international construction projects and disputes.
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Suzanne Morze
Associate Director, Leadership Giving, School of Engineering - External Relations
Current Role at StanfordAssociate Director of Annual Giving, School of Engineering
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Fernando Mujica
Adjunct Professor, Electrical Engineering
BioFernando Mujica is an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University. He received the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology in 1999 and B.S. and M.S. degrees from Universidad Simón Bolivar in 1993 and 1995, respectively. Prof. Mujica's research interests are in the area of signal processing. He has been granted more than 25 US patents over a wide range of applications. Prof. Mujica was elected to the Tau Beta Pi Teaching Honor Roll in 2022.
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Tiffany Murray
Executive Associate to Russ B. Altman, MD, PhD & Teri E. Klein, PhD, Bioengineering
Current Role at StanfordExecutive Associate to
Russ B. Altman, MD, PhD
The Kenneth Fong Professor of Engineering
Professor, Bioengineering, Genetics, Medicine, Biomedical Data Science and, by courtesy, of Computer Science
Teri E. Klein, PhD
Professor, Biomedical Data Science & Medicine and, by courtesy, of Genetics -
Reza Nasiri Mahalati
Adjunct Professor, Electrical Engineering
BioReza Nasiri Mahalati is an Adjunct Professor in the department of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University and a senior hardware design engineer at Apple Inc. His current work focuses on the development of new hardware technologies that enable more fluid human computer interactions. He received the B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering from the Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran in 2008, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University in 2010 and 2013, respectively. While at Stanford, his research focused on mode-division multiplexing in multi-mode optical fibers, fiber-based imaging, optimization and digital signal processing.
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Dale Nesbitt
Adjunct Lecturer, Management Science and Engineering
BioDr. Nesbitt has been teaching MSE 252 (Decision Analysis), MSE 352 (Professional Decision Analysis), MSE 353 (Advanced Decision Analysis), MSE 299 (Coercion Free Social Systems), and MSE 254 (The Ethical Analyst) in the department. He has practiced and taught in these fields, and economic modeling, for several decades.
Dr. Nesbitt has been researching Bayesian statistical analysis, ethics, and ethical theories in a general setting (i.e., personal ethics not necessarily associated with any particular field or discipline). His research focuses on ethics per se, not ethics related to a specific technology, commodity, discipline, area, or practice. He is currently focused on ethics from a socio-personal perspective, one in which coercion is minimized or sanctioned, one that blends the utilitarian approach of Harsanyi, Mill, Bentham, and others with the uncoerced game theory approach of Nash and Harsanyi. The objective of this research is to give a roadmap for people (and groups) to behave ethically and do good and also to be able to consider ethical decision making under uncertainty.
Dr. Nesbitt is completing a monograph on Bayesian Linear Regression intended to unify key dimensions of the field around a pure Bayesian probabilistic viewpoint, what he calls “unabashed Bayes.” The monograph is scheduled for completion in 2022. Dr. Nesbitt continues to research and practice Bayesian regression and probabilistic analysis, recently applying it to disciplines such as automobile selection, jet technology and fuel projection, and petrochemicals demand.
Dr. Nesbitt has focused for many years on building economic-environmental models of the key energy commodities—oil and refined products, natural gas, petrochemicals, automobiles, electric power generation, natural gas and electricity storage, renewable energy, environmental emissions and remediation, and demand/emission. His models and work in the field are well known, extending the classical economic equilibrium approach.
Dr. Nesbitt has worked and published in the field of semi-Markovian Decision Problems (the area of his thesis at Stanford), energy economics, cartels and monopolies, methods for modeling markets, Bayesian statistics, and free (meaning uncoerced) social systems.