School of Engineering
Showing 81-100 of 613 Results
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Helen L. Chen
Research Scientist
BioHelen L. Chen is a research scientist in the Designing Education Lab in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Stanford University. She holds an undergraduate degree in communication from UCLA and a PhD in communication with a minor in psychology from Stanford. Helen is a board member for the Association for Authentic, Experiential and Evidence-Based Learning (AAEEBL) and is a co-author of Documenting Learning with ePortfolios: A Guide for College Instructors and co-executive editor of the International Journal of ePortfolio. She works closely with the Association of American Colleges and Universities and consults with institutions on general education redesign, authentic assessment approaches, design thinking, and personal branding and ePortfolios. Helen's current research and scholarship focus on engineering and entrepreneurship education; the pedagogy of portfolios and reflective practice in higher education; and redesigning how learning is recorded and recognized in traditional transcripts and academic credentials.
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Jianqing Chen
Affiliate, Mechanical Engineering - Design
Visiting Scholar, Mechanical Engineering - DesignBioMy work focuses on robotic remote control and manipulation systems utilizing reinforcement learning (RL). The research centers on developing RL-based algorithms that enable robots to learn optimal control strategies for tasks such as navigation, object manipulation, and interaction within dynamic environments. By training robots through iterative trial-and-error processes, these systems continuously improve performance, adapt to new situations, and enhance autonomous control. The broader goal is to achieve more efficient, precise, and scalable robotic behavior in real-world applications.
In parallel, I have over seven years of experience in investment and asset management. I lead 280 Capital, a family-backed investment office overseeing more than $1 billion across digital assets and emerging technologies.
My technical background spans artificial intelligence, enterprise storage systems, encryption, and large-scale computing infrastructure. I contributed to the design of next-generation enterprise SSD controller and storage system chips ranging from 16nm to 7nm at Broadcom and SK Hynix. At Roche, I led the construction and optimization of large-scale biodata software and hardware architectures supporting advanced DNA sequencing and scalable computational biology workloads. I also hold multiple U.S. patents related to improving storage and computing efficiency through deep learning, AI, and advanced systems design. -
Woongbi Cho
Postdoctoral Scholar, Mechanical Engineering
BioWoongbi Cho is a postdoctoral scholar in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Stanford University. He received his B.S. in Polymer Science and Engineering from Inha University in February 2019 , and his Ph.D. in Organic and Nano Engineering from Hanyang University in February 2025. His doctoral research focused on developing next-generation polymer composites, emphasizing processing-structure-property-performance (PSPP) relationships in liquid crystalline and sulfur-rich polymers. Currently, Woongbi's research interests center on adaptive materials, electromagnetically (EM)-driven soft robotics, polymer assembly mechanisms, and active metamaterials for applications in soft robotics, optoelectronics, and energy harvesting.
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Savannah Cofer
Ph.D. Student in Mechanical Engineering, admitted Autumn 2020
BioReconfigurable Origami Robotics, Stanford SHAPE Lab
PhD Mechanical Engineering
Stanford Knight-Hennessy Scholars
NSF GRFP Fellowship