School of Medicine
Showing 9,001-9,010 of 12,979 Results
-
Carl Preiksaitis
Clinical Assistant Professor, Emergency Medicine
BioDr. Carl Preiksaitis is a Clinical Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine, where he directs the Human Experience and Advancement Lab (HEAL). His research examines how artificial intelligence and digital technology are reshaping the future of work and training in emergency medicine — spanning human-AI interaction in clinical environments, the cognitive and relational impact of AI tools on physicians, and educational informatics. Using large-scale EHR and administrative data, he studies how AI changes the way emergency physicians think, document, and develop expertise over time.
His work has been published in Nature Medicine, NEJM Catalyst, and Annals of Emergency Medicine, and is funded by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine, the American Medical Association, and the National Library of Medicine.
Nationally, Dr. Preiksaitis serves as Associate Editor of the Journal of Graduate Medical Education and leads AI initiatives at the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. At Stanford, he directs the Medical Education Residency Track and leads the graduate medical education curriculum in the Department of Emergency Medicine.
Dr. Preiksaitis earned his MD from NYU Grossman School of Medicine, completed his emergency medicine residency and medical education fellowship at Stanford, and holds a Master of Education from the University of Cincinnati. -
Tyler Prestwood
Clinical Assistant Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
BioTyler Prestwood, M.D., Ph.D. specializes in the treatment of people with psychotic disorders and psychiatric complications with immunologic abnormalities. He is an attending in the INSPIRE Clinic at Stanford, which provides interdisciplinary care for people experiencing psychosis. He also provides care for patients experiencing psychiatric symptoms associated with long-COVID/Post-Acute Coronavirus Syndrome (PACS).
Dr. Prestwood has extensive research experience related to the immune system in various contexts including infectious disease, cancer, and psychiatry. His current work is focused on understanding the influence of infections, the immune response to infections, and metabolism on the subsequent development of psychiatric illnesses, including schizophrenia and PACS. -
Allison Pribnow
Clinical Assistant Professor, Pediatrics - Hematology & Oncology
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsSolid Tumors, Bone Sarcomas, Global Oncology, Health Disparities