Institute for Computational and Mathematical Engineering (ICME)
Showing 11-17 of 17 Results
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Wei Li
Adjunct Professor, Institute for Computational and Mathematical Engineering (ICME)
BioDr. Wei Li works at the intersection of AI strategy, governance, and enterprise impact.
Wei is an AI executive and Adjunct Professor at Stanford University, focusing on Innovation to Impact (I2I)—turning computational, AI, and interdisciplinary ideas into deployable systems, scalable products, and measurable business, societal and clinical outcomes.
Previously, Wei served as VP/GM of AI & Analytics (AIA) at Intel, leading large global teams that built full-stack AI software platforms and shaping AI product strategy, ecosystem development, and enterprise deployment at scale, driving multi-billion-dollar AI revenue across enterprise and industry use cases. He also previously served on the boards of the PyTorch Foundation and Linux Foundation AI&Data, contributing to open-source governance, industry collaboration, and responsible AI adoption. Wei has collaborated with leading technology companies including Meta, OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, Hugging Face, AWS, and Accenture, as well as emerging startups. He has delivered keynotes and lectures at leading forums, including the World AI Summit and Harvard Business School, and engage with media such as Bloomberg to share insights on AI strategy, governance, and enterprise impact.
Wei regularly advises executives and boards on AI strategy, governance, and risk management—particularly where AI materially affects competitiveness, scale, and regulatory exposure. Wei holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Cornell University and completed an executive program at Stanford Graduate School of Business. -
Christian Linder
Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering
BioChristian Linder is a Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and, by courtesy, of Mechanical Engineering. Through the development of novel and efficient in-house computational methods based on a sound mathematical foundation, the research goal of the Computational Mechanics of Materials (CM2) Lab at Stanford University, led by Dr. Linder, is to understand micromechanically originated multi-scale and multi-physics mechanisms in solid materials undergoing large deformations and fracture. Applications include sustainable energy storage materials, flexible electronics, and granular materials.
Dr. Linder received his Ph.D. in Civil and Environmental Engineering from UC Berkeley, an MA in Mathematics from UC Berkeley, an M.Sc. in Computational Mechanics from the University of Stuttgart, and a Dipl.-Ing. degree in Civil Engineering from TU Graz. Before joining Stanford in 2013 he was a Junior-Professor of Micromechanics of Materials at the Applied Mechanics Institute of Stuttgart University where he also obtained his Habilitation in Mechanics. Notable honors include a Fulbright scholarship, the 2013 Richard-von-Mises Prize, the 2016 ICCM International Computational Method Young Investigator Award, the 2016 NSF CAREER Award, and the 2019 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE).