School of Engineering
Showing 61-80 of 185 Results
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Jacob Troy Needels
Ph.D. Student in Aeronautics and Astronautics, admitted Spring 2019
BioJacob Needels is a current Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics at Stanford University. He holds a M.S. in Aeronautics and Astronautics from Stanford and a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of California, Davis. His research focuses on computational fluid dynamics for high-speed flows, with an emphasis on nonequilibrium thermochemical models and uncertainty quantification for robust vehicle design. He works on development of the SU2 open-source software, particularly focused on implementation and validation of capabilities to model multi-species reacting gases.
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Drew Nelson
Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Emeritus
BioResearch involves development of improved methods for predicting the fatigue life of engineering materials, incuding the effects of manufacturing processes, and investigation of new approaches in the field of experimental mechanics, such as determination of residual stresses using optical methods.
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Dale Nesbitt
Adjunct Lecturer, Management Science and Engineering
BioDr. Nesbitt has been teaching MSE 252 (Decision Analysis), MSE 352 (Professional Decision Analysis), MSE 353 (Advanced Decision Analysis), MSE 299 (Coercion Free Social Systems), and MSE 254 (The Ethical Analyst) in the department. He has practiced and taught in these fields, and economic modeling, for several decades.
Dr. Nesbitt has been researching Bayesian statistical analysis, ethics, and ethical theories in a general setting (i.e., personal ethics not necessarily associated with any particular field or discipline). His research focuses on ethics per se, not ethics related to a specific technology, commodity, discipline, area, or practice. He is currently focused on ethics from a socio-personal perspective, one in which coercion is minimized or sanctioned, one that blends the utilitarian approach of Harsanyi, Mill, Bentham, and others with the uncoerced game theory approach of Nash and Harsanyi. The objective of this research is to give a roadmap for people (and groups) to behave ethically and do good and also to be able to consider ethical decision making under uncertainty.
Dr. Nesbitt is completing a monograph on Bayesian Linear Regression intended to unify key dimensions of the field around a pure Bayesian probabilistic viewpoint, what he calls “unabashed Bayes.” The monograph is scheduled for completion in 2022. Dr. Nesbitt continues to research and practice Bayesian regression and probabilistic analysis, recently applying it to disciplines such as automobile selection, jet technology and fuel projection, and petrochemicals demand.
Dr. Nesbitt has focused for many years on building economic-environmental models of the key energy commodities—oil and refined products, natural gas, petrochemicals, automobiles, electric power generation, natural gas and electricity storage, renewable energy, environmental emissions and remediation, and demand/emission. His models and work in the field are well known, extending the classical economic equilibrium approach.
Dr. Nesbitt has worked and published in the field of semi-Markovian Decision Problems (the area of his thesis at Stanford), energy economics, cartels and monopolies, methods for modeling markets, Bayesian statistics, and free (meaning uncoerced) social systems. -
Lars Thorben Neustock
Lecturer, d.school
BioLars Thorben is a PhD student in Electrical Engineering. In his research, he uses numerical methods to teach computers how to optimize physical devices. Here, he focuses on ion optical devices. The unintuitive shapes that his algorithms design can explore the full range of additive manufacturing of metallic devices. His past work includes the optimization of photonic crystal structures and virtual instrumentation for online education. Lars is an Accel Innovation Scholar at the Stanford Technology Ventures Program. Moreover, he was a Creativity in Research scholar, a program that he is now co-teaching. He is supported by the ERP-Program from the German Federal Ministry of Economics and Energy.
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Brett Newman
Lecturer
BioAcademic
2013 - 2018 : Stanford : Lecturer : Visual Thinking, ME115C: Design and Business Factors
2018 - Present : Stanford : Lead Lecturer : Design 161 Capstone
Professional
2004 - 2007 : Azud : VP Product
2007 - Present : Daylight Design : Partner -
Tyler Simone Newman
Undergraduate, English
Undergraduate, Hasso Plattner Institute of Design
Ug Office Assistant, Hume CenterBioTyler Newman is a junior studying design and creative writing at Stanford University.
She is a multidisciplinary creative passionate about the intersections of storytelling and design. Through story-centered creative exploration, she seeks to probe the topics of identity and equity as well as create opportunities for communal introspection.
She is the founder of Afro Puff Chronicles, an 11k+ member online community empowering women of color through art and writing. She is also the co-founder of the Women of Color Conference, a virtual summit providing educational panels and scholarships—made possible through a partnership with Boba Guys—to an audience of over 5,000 young changemakers. During her COVID gap year, she founded The Year of Mastery, a gap year community by students, for students that provides a gap year curriculum based on monthly passion exploration. She is a winner of the Princeton Prize in Race Relations and was listed as one of the Conversationalist’s honorees in Media & Journalism. Tyler has spoken at over 20 industry events on GenZ trends, technology, and the arts, including Google's Thread Count Conference, the Facebook x Instagram Civic Forum, Instagram's Story School, and Instagram Next during her time as an Instagram Teen Consultant. She was interviewed for the primetime CBS news pieces “Royal Wedding Special” interviewed by Michelle Miller and "Meghan and Harry Plus One" interviewed by Gayle King.