School of Engineering
Showing 101-110 of 359 Results
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Chen Geng
Ph.D. Student in Computer Science, admitted Autumn 2023
BioI'm a first-year CS Ph.D. student at Stanford. I'm advised by Prof. Jiajun Wu and affiliated with the Stanford Vision and Learning Lab. My research lies at the intersection between Graphics, 3D Vision, and Machine Learning. Specifically, I'm currently interested in physical scene understanding by inverting graphics engines.
Previously, I got my bachelor's degree in Computer Science from Zhejiang University in 2023, with an honors degree from Chu Kochen Honors College. During my undergraduate, I was fortunate to work closely with Prof. Xiaowei Zhou, Prof. Sida Peng and Prof. Jiajun Wu on several research projects.
You can find more information on my homepage: https://chen-geng.com -
Lequn Geng
Associate Director, California-Pacific-Northwest AI Hardware Hub, Electrical Engineering
BioLequn Geng is the Associate Director of the California-Pacific-Northwest AI Hardware Hub, one of the eight Microelectronics Commons Hubs established by the U.S. Department of Defense in 2023. In this role, he oversees the day-to-day operations of the Hub Central Office and an annual budget of over $10 million.
Prior to joining the Northwest-AI-Hub, Lequn Geng was a Research Development Specialist in the Stanford Research Development Office in the Office of the Vice Provost and Dean of Research. He helped professors across Stanford create competitive grant proposals to secure federal funding for large centers and strategic programs. During his tenure, he supported proposals to NSF, DOE, and DoD, leading to successful funding including for the Microelectronics Commons program.
Lequn Geng has a chemistry Ph.D. degree from the University of Michigan. -
Madison George
Ph.D. Student in Bioengineering, admitted Autumn 2023
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsWith my research I bridge the most prominent aspects of my life: academics and athletics. In undergrad, I completed a co-mentored interdisciplinary thesis to design the first women's pole vaulting shoes. Now, I am committed to improving biomedical imaging for musculoskeletal injury diagnoses, specifically dynamic imaging to create 3D models of areas of the musculoskeletal system and evaluate movement and function. My primary goals are to enhance performance and properly diagnose injuries.
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J. Christian Gerdes
Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Emeritus
BioChris Gerdes is a Professor Emeritus of Mechanical Engineering at Stanford University. His laboratory studies how cars move, how humans drive cars and how to design future cars that work cooperatively with the driver or drive themselves. Vehicles in the lab include X1, a student-built electric, steer-by-wire test vehicle; Takumi, a modified Toyota Supra capable of autonomous drifting in tandem with another car; and Marty, the electrified, automated, drifting DeLorean. Chris' interests in vehicle safety extend to ethics and government policy, having helped to develop the US Federal Automated Vehicle Policy while serving as the first Chief Innovation Officer of the US Department of Transportation.