School of Medicine
Showing 151-200 of 537 Results
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Samantha Wang
Clinical Associate Professor, Medicine
BioDr. Samantha Wang is a Clinical Associate Professor in the Division of Hospital Medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine. She received her medical and masters in health sciences degrees from Yale School of Medicine and completed her Internal Medicine residency at Stanford, where she served as Chief Resident. She practices as a hospitalist at Stanford Health Care and works closely with residents and students in clinical teaching and mentorship. Her clinical focus is in patient-centered communication, and she directs inpatient implementation of the Serious Illness Care Program while studying strategies to improve the quality and impact of serious illness conversations for hospitalized patients.
Dr. Wang’s academic work spans health equity, medical education, and faculty development. She leads national collaborations advancing scholarship and advocacy in health equity and has received innovation grants to develop curricula addressing bias, structural racism, and diagnostic equity in clinical care. Her “5-Minute Moment for Racial Justice” curriculum has been disseminated nationally and internationally through Stanford CME and YouTube and translated into multiple languages. She received the American Board of Internal Medicine Professionalism Article Prize (2025) for her scholarship on professionalism and advancing health equity.
Dr. Wang leads faculty development initiatives within the Division of Hospital Medicine that support mentorship, scholarship, and community building. Her work focuses on creating environments where faculty can thrive academically while fostering inclusive learning communities for the next generation of physicians. In recognition of these efforts, she received the Stanford University Women’s Forum Inspiring Early Academic Career Award. -
Xinnan Wang
Professor of Neurosurgery
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsMechanisms underlying mitochondrial dynamics and function, and their implications in neurological disorders.
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Tauska Lan
Affiliate, Genetics - BASE
BioI'm an ML engineer specializing in LLM post-training and agentic systems—with a particular focus on domains where rigor matters: health, biology, and scientific discovery.
Long-horizon agents — Designed and shipped multi-step orchestration systems (Pantheon-CLI, OmicVerse Agent) that outperform general SWE-agent baselines on biomedical tasks. Built cross-provider query routing and sandboxed execution to keep complex workflows robust over extended interactions. My agents don't just respond—they plan, recover from failure, and complete real research pipelines end-to-end.
Agentic science — Created infrastructure where AI doesn't assist research—it conducts it. Vectorized 30 years of NHANES data; parallelized Bayesian kernel machine regression on Kubernetes; built TCGA/GEO pipelines that bridge wet-lab and dry-lab workflows. Co-developed OmicVerse, an open-source platform powering reproducible multi-omics and single-cell analyses across hundreds of studies.
Experience engineering — Scaled rubric-based reward datasets to 1M+ pairs; trained summary and chain-of-thought reward models via RLAIF/RLHF; delivered measurable benchmark lifts in health AI. I care about the full loop: data curation → reward shaping → careful ablation → verifiable outcome—no cherry-picked demos—just metrics that survive scrutiny.
Currently pursuing advanced agentic studies at Karolinska Institutet and Stanford!
Open-source: OmicVerse · Pantheon-CLI · RAG Web UI · AstrBot
If you're working on post-training at scale, scientific agents, or high-integrity data pipelines—I'm always interested in systems that move from promising results to verifiable outcomes. Let's talk. -
Xunda Wang
Basic Life Research Scientist, Neurosurgery
Current Role at StanfordResearch Scientist
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Yiyu Wang
Postdoctoral Scholar, Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine
BioDr. Yiyu Wang is a T32 postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Anesthesiology, Stanford School of Medicine. Her research combines computational models and neuroimaging techniques to characterize the neural architecture underlying complex human experiences in emotion and pain. Her current work focuses on leveraging deep learning, foundation models, and explainable AI to improve neuroimaging-based markers as well as multi-modal markers of chronic pain.
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Ziwei Wang
Postdoctoral Scholar, Radiation Therapy
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsMy current work focuses on establishing preclinical platforms to rapidly validate the functional impact of genetic alterations in tumors using both cell and genetically engineered mouse models. We hope this system can accelerate the discovery and translation of novel cancer therapies to patients.
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Zoey Wang
Postdoctoral Scholar, Psychiatry
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsSleep disruptions in neurodegenerative disorders
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Irene Wapnir, MD
Professor of Surgery (General Surgery)
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsClinical trials in operative procedures such as Nipple-sparing mastectomy, arm lymphatic mapping, skin perfusion and Treatments for Breast Cancer, especially local recurrence. Dr. Wapnir is institutional Principal Investigator and Chair for National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project (NSABP) clinical trials. Laboratory and translational research includes exploring the activity of breast iodide transporter in breast cancer brain metastasis.
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(Alex) Alexandra Ward
Clinical Research Coordinator Associate, Pediatrics - Endocrinology
Bio(Alex) Alexandra Ward is currently a Clinical Research Coordinator at Stanford School of Medicine in the Department of Pediatric Endocrinology. She holds a Bachelor's degree in Sociology from UC Berkeley and has a strong interest in the intersection of medicine and social science. Alexandra is particularly passionate about advancing health equity and studying the social determinants of health. Her experience spans clinical work, academic research, and community engagement.
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Katherine T. Ward, MD
Clinical Professor, Medicine - Primary Care and Population Health
BioDr. Ward is a board-certified, fellowship-trained geriatrician with Stanford Senior Care in Palo Alto, California. She is also board certified in hospice and palliative medicine and internal medicine. Dr. Ward is a clinical professor of medicine and clinical chief of the Geriatrics Section in the Department of Medicine, Division of Primary Care and Population Health at Stanford University School of Medicine.
She specializes in many facets of care for older adults, including internal medicine, dementia care, and palliative care. Dr. Ward uses her extensive experience to teach and implement best practices in nursing home care, geriatric assessment, and care transitions for older adults.
Dr. Ward’s research interests include early detection of dementia in vulnerable populations, dementia care support programs, and geriatric assessment in diverse populations.
She has published her research in peer-reviewed journals including The American Journal of Geriatric Pharmacotherapy; The Journal of Nutrition, Health & Aging; and the Journal of Palliative Medicine. She has served as an ad hoc reviewer for several journals, including Geriatrics. She has also presented posters at annual meetings of the American Geriatrics Society and the Society of General Internal Medicine.
Dr. Ward is a member of the American College of Physicians and the American Geriatrics Society. -
Victoria Ward
Clinical Associate Professor, Pediatrics
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsGlobal child health, digital health, preterm birth, human trafficking
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Roger Warnke
Ronald F. Dorfman, M.B.B.ch., FRCPath, Professor in Hematopathology, Emeritus
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsAs an Emeritus Professor, I no longer have a research laboratory and am now fully retired.