School of Engineering
Showing 111-120 of 301 Results
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Mahdi Al-Husseini
Masters Student in Aeronautics and Astronautics, admitted Winter 2021
BioCaptain Mahdi Al-Husseini is the modernization director at the 25th Infantry Division and an active-duty HH60M helicopter pilot stationed at Wheeler Army Airfield, Hawaii. He is a graduate researcher at Stanford where he studies intelligent systems and human-autonomy teaming as applied to search and rescue, medical evacuation, and wildfire response. Mahdi is a registered patent agent, professional engineer, and inventor with more than 30 patents and patent applications, the majority of which have been acquired by the military and industry.
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Shray Alag
Masters Student in Computer Science, admitted Autumn 2022
BioClass of 2025, Computer Science/Computational Biology
Research Publications:
Alag S (2020) Unique insights from ClinicalTrials.gov by mining protein mutations and RSids in addition to applying the Human Phenotype Ontology. PLoS ONE 15(5): e0233438. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233438.
Alag S (2020) Analysis of COVID-19 clinical trials: A data-driven, ontology-based, and natural language processing approach. PLoS ONE 15(9): e0239694. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239694.
Alag, Shray. 2020, July 31. Extracting Unique Insights by Mining Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms from ClinicalTrials.gov and Applying the Human Phenotype Ontology [Presenter]. Society for Clinical Trials.
Proficient in Python, Java, Bash, Octave, Mathlab. -
Jacqueline Alderson
Visiting Professor, Bioengineering
BioProfessor Jacqueline Alderson is the Tech Director of the University of Western Australia Tech & Policy Lab and a Fulbright Senior Scholar and Visiting Professor at Stanford University. She has over 250 publications and reports in the fields of biomechanical modelling, wearable technologies, applied machine learning, injury prevention, and pro-public technology development. From 2012-23 she served on the Executive Councils of the International Society of Biomechanics in Sport, followed by the International Society of Biomechanics. Her current advisory board roles include the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) Female Performance Health Initiative as well as the UK EPSRC Centre, CAMERA 2.0. Her 26 PhD graduates can be found in leading heath, academic, and high-performance and professional sport institutions around the world. These include the MLB and NFL in the United States; national sports institutes (Singapore, UK, AUS); and, in her home country, Swimming Australia, Tennis Australia, and the Australian Football League. As one of the founding architects of Australia’s Digital Athlete program and the ISBS Geoffrey Dyson awardee for 2024, Jacqueline is visiting Stanford Bioengineering to extend her research stream on the development of digital human twins, with a specific focus on the urgent need for technology regulation and governance in this domain. Her project is supported by the American Chamber of Commerce in Australia (Inaugural Professional Alliance Award) and the Fulbright Commission.