School of Engineering
Showing 201-220 of 387 Results
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Anne Kiremidjian
The C.L. Peck, Class of 1906 Professor in the School of Engineering
BioKiremidjian’s research focuses in two main areas. The first is in earthquake hazard, risk, and resilience modeling. She works on structural component and systems reliability methods; structural damage evaluation models; and regional damage, loss and casualty estimation methods utilizing geographic information and database management systems for portfolios of buildings or spatially distributed lifeline systems assessment with ground motion and structure correlations. Her current research has focused on the development of time dependent hazard and risk models for resilience evaluation of hospitals, schools and financial instruments. In the area of time dependent risk assessment, she has developed models for damage estimation of deteriorating structures in varying environmental conditions.
The second area of research focuses on the design and implementation of wireless sensor networks for health monitoring of structures under every-day loading conditions, and the development of robust and computationally efficient algorithms for structural damage diagnosis following extreme events that can be embedded in wireless sensing units. The damage algorithms utilize modern data science, machine learning and artificial intelligence methods. -
Salma Kirsch
Executive Director of Affiliate Engagement, ICME Affiliates and External Partners
BioEducation:
M.S. in Computer Science (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne, Switzerland)
ThinFilm Electronics (Director, Strategic Alliances)
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (Technology Transfer Officer)
VenTek International (Director, Business Development)
Arthur Andersen - Business Consulting (Senior Manager)
Motorola (Technology Manager) -
Peter K. Kitanidis
Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering
BioKitanidis develops methods for the solution of interpolation and inverse problems utilizing observations and mathematical models of flow and transport. He studies dilution and mixing of soluble substances in heterogeneous geologic formations, issues of scale in mass transport in heterogeneous porous media, and techniques to speed up the decay of pollutants in situ. He also develops methods for hydrologic forecasting and the optimization of sampling and control strategies.
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Meo Kittiwanich
Director of Student and Academic Affairs, Electrical Engineering - Student Services
Current Role at StanfordDirector of Student and Academic Service in the Electrical Engineering Department.
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Fredrik Kjolstad
Assistant Professor of Computer Science
BioFredrik Kjolstad is an Assistant Professor in Computer Science at Stanford University. He works on topics in compilers, programming models, and systems, with an emphasis on compilers for sparse computing problems where we need to separate the algorithms from data representation, as well as fast compilers. He has received the NSF CAREER Award, the MIT EECS First Place George M. Sprowls PhD Thesis Award in Computer Science, the Rosing Award, an Adobe Fellowship, a Google Research Scholarship, and several best/distinguished paper awards.
Website: https://fredrikbk.com/