Stanford University
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Bingxiao Liu
Ph.D. Student in Chinese, admitted Autumn 2020
SHI Discussion Leader, Stanford Pre-Collegiate StudiesBioBingxiao Liu is a Ph.D. student in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures at Stanford University. Her research interests include premodern Chinese literature, cultural and intellectual history; gender and sexuality; emotions, literary and political culture. Her research examines how emotions are invoked or invented to constitute interpersonal ties in 3rd - 6th century China. Working with official histories, commentaries, inscriptions, and literary works, her project explores the reconceptualization of identity and community in emotive terms and the signification of emotion as the legitimizing basis for a new social order in medieval China.
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Daniel Dan Liu
Ph.D. Student in Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, admitted Autumn 2020
Ph.D. Minor, Computer Science
Resident in PathologyBioDaniel received his bachelor's degree in Molecular Biology from Princeton University in 2018, where he conducted research under Dr. Yibin Kang on cancer metastasis and cancer stem cell biology. He then came to Stanford for his MD-PhD training, where he joined the laboratory of Dr. Irv Weissman. His graduate research concerned the prospective isolation of neural stem cells from primary human brain tissue, in development and across lifespan.
Daniel is currently a resident in Anatomic and Neuropathology at Stanford Medicine. -
Mengyao Liu
Ph.D. Student in Classics, admitted Autumn 2022
Ph.D. Minor, Computer ScienceBioI am broadly interested in the production of knowledge in ancient worlds, with a particular interest in the Greco-Roman and Chinese traditions. My curiosity is a comparative and genealogical one at root: by comparing different societies, I seek to grasp the historicity of intellectual practices and the ideas thus produced. Currently, my research interest focuses on astronomy and astrology in Ancient Greece and China.
While completing my B.A. in Classics at Sorbonne University, I investigated how the urban metamorphoses of Rome materialized the transformation of the political regime. My master's thesis at EHESS, "Statues pour les corps, livres pour les mots" : La vie (βἰος) et la rhétorique (λόγος) dans les Discours Sacrés, offers insight into the psychosomatic relations conceived by the Greeks. The inquiry breaks into two interdependent questions: the therapeutic usage of rhetorical practices and the unconventional representation of Asclepius in the Sacred Tales of Aristides.
Having one year of training in software engineering from Tsinghua University, I am also passionate about the potentials of digital humanities.