Stanford University


Showing 11-20 of 189 Results

  • Aqsa Naeem

    Aqsa Naeem

    Physical Science Research Scientist

    Current Research and Scholarly InterestsEnergy System Modeling and Optimization

  • Ronjon Nag

    Ronjon Nag

    Winter CSP Instructor

    BioRonjon Nag is an inventor, teacher and entrepreneur. He is an Adjunct Professor in Genetics at the Stanford School of Medicine, becoming a Stanford Distinguished Careers Institute Fellow in 2016. He teaches AI, Genes, Ethics, Longevity Science and Venture Capital. He is a founder and advisor/board member of multiple start-ups and President of the R42 Group, a venture capital firm which invests in, and creates, AI and Longevity companies. As an AI pioneer of smartphones and app stores, his companies have been sold to Apple, BlackBerry, and Motorola. More recently he has worked on the intersection of AI and Biology. He has been awarded the IET Mountbatten Medal by the Institution of Engineering and Technology, the 2021 IEEE-SCV Outstanding Engineer Award, the $1m Verizon Powerful Answers Award, the 2023 COX AI Lifetime Achievement Award, the 2023 MIT Great Dome Award, and is the 2024 Inductee in the Silicon Valley Engineering Hall of Fame. Professor Nag has a Ph.D from Cambridge, an M.S from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a B.Sc. from Birmingham in the UK. He has numerous interests in the intersection of AI and Healthcare including being CEO of Agemica.ai working on creating a vaccine for aging.

    He has many firsts including:

    Firsts:

    • First laptop with speech recognition built-in (with Apricot, 1984)
    • First selling cursive handwriting recognition (with Lexicus, 1991)
    • First speech recognition phones (with Lexicus/Motorola, 1996)
    • First large-vocabulary Chinese speech recognition (with Lexicus/Motorola, 1996)
    • First Chinese predictive text system on a phone (Lexicus/Motorola, 1997)
    • First predictive text systems in 40 languages on Motorola phones, (Lexicus/Motorola, 1997)
    • First touch screen mobile phone with handwriting recognition (Lexicus/Motorola, 1999)
    • First combined mobile search engine and directory (with Cellmania, 2000)
    • First private label downloadable operator billable apps store (Cellmania, 2000)
    • First BlackBerry Operator Billing apps store (Cellmania,2010)
    • First Neural Network Artificial Intelligence System in the Cloud (Ersatz Labs, 2014)
    • First Throwable 360 Ball Camera (Bounce Imaging, 2015)
    • First Android powered smart light switch (Brightswitch 2017)
    • First blood pressure watch with temperature and pulse oximetry add-ons for Back to Work Covid Kit (GTCardio 2019)
    • First no code AI life sciences app store (Superbio.ai 2022)
    • First proposal for an aging vaccine (Agemica 2023)

  • Claude M. Nagamine, DVM, PhD

    Claude M. Nagamine, DVM, PhD

    Associate Professor of Comparative Medicine

    Current Research and Scholarly InterestsMouse models to study murine and human infectious diseases. These colloborative studies include dengue virus, zika virus, adeno-associated virus, coxsackie virus, enterovirus 71, enterohepatic helicobacters, campylobacters, and anaplasma.

  • Cody Nager

    Cody Nager

    Research Fellow

    BioCody Nager is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution and is affiliated with its History Lab. His scholarship focuses on how interactions between the diverse people of America and the broader Atlantic region have shaped structures of racial inequality, economic development, political rights, and national identity in the United States. He received his doctorate in history from the Graduate Center, City University of New York (CUNY), and his BA from Columbia University. Prior to joining Stanford, he was a dissertation fellow at the University of Pennsylvania’s McNeil Center for Early American Studies and taught at the City College of New York and the CUNY School of Law. His manuscript "Determined to Be American: Regulating Migration and Citizenship in the Early American Republic, 1783–1815" investigates how the new nation’s precarious international and domestic position shaped the politics of migration, divided Americans into parties, escalated the conflicts around visions for the nation’s future, and formed battle lines that shape clashes over migration policy to this day.

  • Seema Nagpal, MD

    Seema Nagpal, MD

    Clinical Professor, Neurology & Neurological Sciences
    Clinical Professor (By courtesy), Neurosurgery

    Current Research and Scholarly InterestsI'm a board certified neuro-oncologist who treats both primary brain tumors as well as metastatic disease to the brain and nervous system. My research concentrates on clinical trials for patients with late-stage central nervous system cancer. I have a special interest in leptomeningeal disease, a devastating complication of lung and breast cancers. I collaborate with Stanford scientists to detect this disease earlier, and with our breast and lung oncologists to improve outcomes for patients.