School of Medicine
Showing 4,201-4,250 of 4,335 Results
-
Negin Yavari
Visiting Scholar, Ophthalmology Research/Clinical Trials
BioNegin Yavari, MD, is a physician-scientist and Visiting Scholar at the Byers Eye Institute at Stanford University School of Medicine. She received her Doctor of Medicine degree from Tehran Azad University of Medical Sciences in 2017. Her research focuses on advancing diagnostic and therapeutic strategies in ophthalmology, with particular emphasis on ocular inflammatory diseases and retinal vasculitis. Through clinical and translational investigation, including the application of machine learning in ophthalmic imaging, she seeks to improve diagnostic precision, optimize treatment strategies, and reduce the long-term burden of vision loss.
Boards, Advisory Committees & Professional Organizations
•Founding Member, Society for AI in Vision and Ophthalmology (2025–Present)
•Member, Foster Ocular Immunology Society (2025–Present)
•Member, American Academy of Ophthalmology (2023–Present)
•Member, Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (2021–Present) -
Sean Yoon
Masters Student in Computer Science, admitted Autumn 2023
Stanford Stdnt Employee-Summer, NeurosurgeryBioB.S. Candidate in Neuroengineering, co-advised by Prof. Ada Poon (Dept of EE) and Prof. Francis Willett (Dept of Neurosurgery)
Research Interests: Brain-Computer Interfaces, Neuroprosthesis, Deep Learning, Neuromorphics, Computational Neuroscience -
Kylie Yorke
Casual - Non-Exempt, Psych/General Psychiatry and Psychology (Adult)
Current Role at StanfordLab Manager; Stanford Social Neuroscience Lab
-
Isabella Young
Casual - Non-Exempt, Psych/General Psychiatry and Psychology (Adult)
BioIsabella “Bella” Young is a Clinical Psychology doctoral student in the PAU–Stanford Consortium, expected to graduate in 2030. She holds dual Bachelor of Science degrees in Psychology and Criminology, with minors in Sociology and Political Science, from the University of Utah, and earned her Master’s degree in Clinical Psychology from Teachers College, Columbia University.
Bella is committed to integrating empirical research with evidence-based treatment, believing this combination creates the most effective approaches to care. She is a proud alumna of the Perinatal Research on Intergenerational Solutions for Equity (RISE) Laboratory, where she contributed to the Nurse-Family Partnership and Mozambique studies, examining how social inequities become biologically embedded across generations through DNA methylation. She also partnered with Manhattan-based organizations advancing Birthing Justice.
Currently, she continues her work in Columbia’s Maternal & Reproductive Psych Laboratory, where she helped launch a Reproductive Identity study and served as first author on a reproductive identity narrative.
Her research interests focus on perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, reproductive identity, and severe personality pathology in mothers (e.g., borderline personality disorder, postpartum psychosis). Ultimately, Bella aspires to become a clinical psychologist dedicated to bridging research and clinical practice to better support individuals during the perinatal period.