School of Medicine
Showing 41-50 of 103 Results
-
Hyunkyung Claire Kim
Postdoctoral Scholar, Endocrinology and Metabolism
BioHyunkyung Claire Kim is a Postdoctoral Research Scholar in the Translational Genomics of Diabetes Lab led by Dr. Anna Gloyn. She received her PhD in Genetics from the University of Chicago, where she developed a statistical method to disentangle shared and trait-specific genetic architecture across complex diseases using large-scale biobank data. Prior to her doctoral training, she worked at Massachusetts General Hospital, studying the genetic subtypes and heterogeneity of type 2 diabetes through data-driven clustering approaches.
She is interested in the translational genomics of diabetes, including integrating human genetics with multi-omic data to uncover disease mechanisms and advance precision medicine. Her long-term research interests include developing computational methods to understand how genetic, molecular, and environmental factors jointly shape metabolic disease risk, disease heterogeneity, and progression. -
Donghoon Kim
Postdoctoral Scholar, Radiology
BioDr. Donghoon Kim is a postdoctoral scholar at Stanford’s Center for Advanced Functional Neuroimaging (CAFN), working in close collaboration with the Stanford Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (ADRC). His work develops cutting-edge deep learning approaches for multimodal neuroimaging analysis, with an emphasis on the early detection and characterization of Alzheimer’s disease pathology.
Before joining Stanford, he earned his Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering from the University of California, Davis. His Ph.D. thesis was titled "Deep Learning-Driven Technical Developments and Clinical Applications of Arterial Spin Labeling MRI." During his Ph.D. studies, he focused on the development of advanced deep learning techniques for ASL MRI and its clinical applications. During his master's degree in Biomedical Engineering at Virginia Tech–Wake Forest University, he studied the functional connectivity of the default mode network using resting-state BOLD fMRI among youth football players.