School of Engineering
Showing 1,441-1,450 of 7,080 Results
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David Donoho
Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor in the School of Humanities and Sciences
On Leave from 01/01/2025 To 03/31/2025BioDavid Donoho is a mathematician who has made fundamental contributions to theoretical and computational statistics, as well as to signal processing and harmonic analysis. His algorithms have contributed significantly to our understanding of the maximum entropy principle, of the structure of robust procedures, and of sparse data description.
Research Statement:
My theoretical research interests have focused on the mathematics of statistical inference and on theoretical questions arising in applying harmonic analysis to various applied problems. My applied research interests have ranged from data visualization to various problems in scientific signal processing, image processing, and inverse problems. -
Siddharth Doshi
Ph.D. Student in Materials Science and Engineering, admitted Autumn 2019
Masters Student in Materials Science and Engineering, admitted Winter 2025BioSiddharth is a PhD student in Materials Science at Stanford University, where he is a Meta PhD Fellow working with Mark Brongersma and Nicholas Melosh. His research is focused on developing electrically tunable active optical metasurfaces using soft polymers, enabling applications ranging from on-the-fly reconfigurable optical computing devices to wearable photonics. Previously, he received his Bachelor's degree in Engineering from the University of New South Wales (Sydney, Australia) and spent time in industry designing award-winning consumer products.
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Jonathan Dotan
Program Coordinator, Electrical Engineering
Staff, Program-Weissman T.BioJonathan Dotan is the founding director of The Starling Lab at Stanford University and USC, where he leads applied research on the decentralized web and human rights. For over 20 years, he’s navigated the intersections of media, tech, and policy as a tech founder.
Jonathan is a fellow at Stanford’s Center for Blockchain Research and Compression Forum, where he is researching strategy and policy for distributed ledger technologies. His scholarship examines Internet governance frameworks, the transition to Web 3.0 and the prospects for a more decentralized internet.
He lectures at Stanford’s School of Engineering and Graduate School of Business. Jonathan’s teaching asks students to consider the never-simple relationship between innovation and progress — recognizing how each new technology brings choices and responsibilities.