School of Humanities and Sciences
Showing 261-270 of 435 Results
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Dale Miller
Class of 1968/Ed Zschau Professor and Professor of Psychology
BioProfessor Miller’s research focuses on various aspects of social and group behavior. Long interested in social norms, he has investigated the processes underlying the development, transmission, and modification of group norms. He has been especially interested in the emergence and perpetuation of social norms that lack broad support. A second focus of his research is the origins of people’s commitment to social justice and the role that justice plays in social life. He has also studied and written on the sources and cures of cultural conflict.
Professor Miller has served on the editorial board of several scientific journals and currently serves on the editorial board of several scientific journals and currently serves on the editorial boards of the Social Justice Research, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and Psychological Inquiry. He has received numerous awards and has been a Visiting Fellow at both the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (Stanford) and the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton).
At Stanford University since 2002, he is the Class of 1968 / Ed Zschau Professor of Organizational Behavior. He currently teaches the MBA course on Critical Analytical Thinking. He also is the Faculty Director of Stanford’s Center of Social Innovation. -
Maryam Mohagheghtabar
Research Scholar, Psychology
BioI am a researcher with a PhD in Mathematics working at the intersection of mathematical modeling, machine learning, and medical data analysis. My research focuses on developing interpretable, stable, and mathematically grounded models for complex biomedical data.
My background includes work on large-scale biomedical datasets, including cancer and brain imaging data, where I focused on two core foundations of model design: (i) regularization, to improve stability, reduce overfitting, and incorporate the intrinsic structure of the data; and (ii) convex optimization, to ensure well-behaved optimization landscapes with globally optimal and computationally tractable solutions.
Currently, I apply mathematical modeling and machine learning methods to the analysis of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data. -
Benoît Monin
Bowen H. and Janice Arthur McCoy Professor of Leadership Values and Professor of Psychology
BioBenoît Monin received his Ph.D. in Psychology from Princeton University, and an M.Sc. in Social Psychology at the London School of Economics. He completed his undergraduate studies at ESSEC (France). Monin joined the Stanford Department of Psychology in 2001, and since 2008 he has held appointments both in psychology and in the Organizational Behavior area at the Stanford Graduate School of Business.