Stanford University


Showing 1,241-1,250 of 7,803 Results

  • Cynthia Chuang

    Cynthia Chuang

    Clinical Professor, Radiation Oncology - Radiation Physics

    BioEducation:

    1990-B.S., Bioelectrical Engineering (6-1B), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA

    1992-M.S., Bioengineering, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

    1994-M.S., Nuclear Engineering (NMR Spectroscopy), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA

    1999-Ph.D., Nuclear Engineering (Boron Neutron Capture Therapy), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA

    2001-Postdoctoral Fellowship (Peregrine Project), Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

    2003-Medical Physics Residency, University of California, San Francisco (joint 3.5-year postdoctoral and residency program)


    Academic Appointments:

    2003 - 2005-Clinical Instructor, Radiation Oncology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California

    2005 - 2009-Assistant Adjunct Professor, Radiation Oncology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California

    2009 - 2013-Assistant Professor In Residence, Radiation Oncology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California

    2013 - 2017-Associate Professor In Residence, Radiation Oncology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California

    2017 - 2018-Associate Professor of Clinical Radiation Oncology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California

    2019 - 2023-Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Radiation Oncology, Clinical Educator Line, Stanford University, Stanford, CA

    2023- Present-Clinical Professor, Department of Radiation Oncology, Clinical Educator Line, Stanford University, Stanford, CA

  • Henry Chubb

    Henry Chubb

    Clinical Associate Professor, Pediatrics - Cardiology

    Current Research and Scholarly Interestshttps://www.researchgate.net/profile/Henry_Chubb

  • William Chueh

    William Chueh

    Director, Precourt Institute for Energy, Kimmelman Professor, Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, of Energy Science and Engineering, of Photon Science and Senior Fellow at the Precourt Institute for Energy

    BioThe availability of low-cost but intermittent renewable electricity (e.g., derived from solar and wind) underscores the grand challenge to store and dispatch energy so that it is available when and where it is needed. Redox-active materials promise the efficient transformation between electrical, chemical, and thermal energy, and are at the heart of carbon-neutral energy cycles. Understanding design rules that govern materials chemistry and architecture holds the key towards rationally optimizing technologies such as batteries, fuel cells, electrolyzers, and novel thermodynamic cycles. Electrochemical and chemical reactions involved in these technologies span diverse length and time scales, ranging from Ångströms to meters and from picoseconds to years. As such, establishing a unified, predictive framework has been a major challenge. The central question unifying our research is: “can we understand and engineer redox reactions at the levels of electrons, ions, molecules, particles and devices using a bottom-up approach?” Our approach integrates novel synthesis, fabrication, characterization, modeling and analytics to understand molecular pathways and interfacial structure, and to bridge fundamentals to energy storage and conversion technologies by establishing new design rules.

  • Benjamin I. Chung

    Benjamin I. Chung

    Professor of Urology and, by courtesy, of Epidemiology and Population Health

    Current Research and Scholarly InterestsRenal cell carcinoma and prostate cancer outcomes research and epidemiology.

  • Lorinda Chung

    Lorinda Chung

    Professor of Medicine (Immunology and Rheumatology) and, by courtesy, of Dermatology

    Current Research and Scholarly InterestsMy research interests focus on all aspects of systemic sclerosis. I am currently involved in clinical, translational, and epidemiologic research in these areas, and dedicate a substantial portion of my research time to investigator-initiated and multi-center clinical trials of novel therapeutics for the treatment of systemic sclerosis.

  • Philip Chung

    Philip Chung

    Instructor, Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine

    BioI am a general anesthesiologist and healthcare AI researcher. My areas of research focus on large language model applications in perioperative medicine and anesthesiology, particularly for clinical reasoning, risk prediction, and documentation generation to improve clinician workflows.

    In addition to practicing at the Stanford hospital, I am also a member of Nima Aghaeepour's laboratory. See my CV and Google Scholar on the bottom right of this page for more information.