Computer Science
Showing 281-300 of 1,237 Results
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Steven Feng
Ph.D. Student in Computer Science, admitted Autumn 2022
BioI'm a Stanford Computer Science PhD student and NSERC PGS-D scholar, working with the Stanford AI Lab and Stanford NLP Group. I am co-advised by Michael C. Frank and Noah Goodman as part of the Language & Cognition (LangCog) and Computation & Cognition (CoCo) Labs. I am grateful to receive support from Amazon Science, Microsoft AFMR, and StabilityAI.
My ultimate goal is to blend knowledge from multiple disciplines to advance AI research. My current research centers around aligning foundation model and human learning and capabilities, particularly in reasoning, generalization, and efficiency. I have explored ways to improve the controllability of language and visual generation models, and integrate structured and multimodal information to enhance their reasoning capabilities.
I'm investigating psychologically and cognitively inspired methods for continual learning, self-improvement, and advanced reasoning in foundation models. I'm also exploring methods to bridge the data efficiency gap between human and model learning while shedding further light on human cognitive models and our efficient language and vision acquisition capabilities.
Previously, I was a master's student at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU), where I worked with Eduard Hovy and Malihe Alikhani on language generation, data augmentation, and commonsense reasoning. Before that, I was an undergraduate student at the University of Waterloo, where I worked with Jesse Hoey on dialogue agents and text generation.
My research contributions have been recognized with several publications at major conferences and a best paper award at INLG 2021. I am also an Honorable Mention for the Jessie W.H. Zou Memorial Award and CRA Outstanding Undergraduate Researcher Award.
I am a co-instructor for the Stanford CS25 Transformers course, and mentor and advise several students. I also led the organization of CtrlGen, a controllable generation workshop at NeurIPS 2021, and was involved in the GEM benchmark and workshop for NLG evaluation.
In my free time, I enjoy gaming, playing the piano and guitar, martial arts, and table tennis. I am also the founder and president of the Stanford Piano Society. -
Swapnil Gandhi
Ph.D. Student in Computer Science, admitted Autumn 2022
BioMy broad research interests include distributed systems and cloud computing – in particular, I am interested in the system-side problems associated with learning, deploying, and operationalizing machine learning models at scale.
Previously, I was a Research Fellow at Microsoft Research India and prior to that obtained my Masters (by Research) in Computer and Data Systems from the Indian Institute of Science (IISc). -
Andrew Kean Gao
Masters Student in Computer Science, admitted Autumn 2023
BioImmersed in the AI space since 2019, Andrew is excited by the potential of AI/ML in all domains of industry, academia, and life. He has built several popular projects in AI, such as Lightspeed Multithreading and BibleGPT. His team won a Grand Prize at Stanford TreeHacks 2023 out of nearly 2,000 competitors. Beyond AI, Andrew has conducted research in molecular biology, disease diagnosis, drug design, and computational immunology.
Software developer and student at Stanford University specializing in artificial intelligence and large language models.
Personal websites:
https://andrew.md/
https://andrewgao.dev/