Stanford University
Showing 551-600 of 745 Results
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Julia Donahue
Senior Project Manager, Med/Stanford Center for Clinical Research
BioJulia Donahue is a Clinical Research Manager with the Stanford Center for Clinical Research (SCCR) at Stanford University. Julia has been working with SCCR since 2021. Her professional interests include Project Management, Digital Health, Study-Startup, Hospital-Based Research, and Decentralized Clinical Trials. She has extensive clinical trial experience in multiple fields, including but not limited to cardiology, dermatology, endocrinology, infectious diseases, psychiatry, and rheumatology.
Julia graduated with honors from McGill University in 2016, where her primary research interests were in neurodevelopmental disorders and autobiographical memory. -
Krista Donaldson
Casual - Non-Exempt, School of Medicine - MDRP'S - Biodesign Program
Current Role at StanfordDirector of Innovation to Impact, Byers Center for Biodesign
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Yiwen Dong
Research Asst - Graduate, Program-Noh, H.
BioYiwen Dong is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford University, advised by Prof. Hae Young Noh. Her research interest is human behavior characterization and health monitoring through their interactions with the physical structures. Her current work focuses on human and animal health monitoring through footstep/activity-induced structural vibrations.
While structures are traditionally considered as passive and indifferent, her works allow the structures to be both self-aware and user-aware. Yiwen developed systems that utilize ambient structural vibrations to infer human behaviors and health status, which enables many smart building applications such as in-home patient monitoring and elder care, intruder prevention and occupant management, animal health monitoring, and welfare. She strives for the next-generation intelligent infrastructures by exploring the potential of structural monitoring for human-centered purposes.
Yiwen has an interdisciplinary background in structural engineering, electrical engineering, and machine learning. Yiwen received her Master’s degree in Structural Engineering at Stanford University and her Bachelor’s degree in civil engineering at Nanyang Technological University. She won various awards (Best Paper Award, runner-ups in competitions) in ubiquitous computing and cyber-physical system conferences. She is passionate about combining the physical knowledge from structural dynamics, sensing approaches from cyber-physical systems, and data-driven models from machine learning to infer people’s behavior patterns and health status. -
Alona Dontsova
Organizational Insight Anlys, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
BioAlona Dontsova is an HR Data Lead at SLAC who empowers leaders to make informed business decisions using personnel data. She provides actionable insight about the workforce to help leaders understand their employees and organizational needs, both present and future. Alona believes that data can play a crucial role in building collaborative, diverse, and visionary teams. She leverages technology to equip HR professionals with the tools and skills to use data in their decision-making and cultivate a data-driven culture in HR. Alona's unwavering belief in the power of people data to drive positive change in organizations is a driving force in her role.
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Niles Dorn
Center Services Support Specialist, David Rumsey Map Center
BioNiles Dorn received his BA in Physics & Astronomy from Pomona College. At the Map Center, he assists in overseeing operations and technology in service of making the collections more accessible to students, researchers and the public.
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Jonathan Dotan
Program Coordinator, Electrical Engineering
Staff, Program-Weissman T.BioJonathan Dotan is the founding director of The Starling Lab at Stanford University and USC, where he leads applied research on the decentralized web and human rights. For over 20 years, he’s navigated the intersections of media, tech, and policy as a tech founder.
Jonathan is a fellow at Stanford’s Center for Blockchain Research and Compression Forum, where he is researching strategy and policy for distributed ledger technologies. His scholarship examines Internet governance frameworks, the transition to Web 3.0 and the prospects for a more decentralized internet.
He lectures at Stanford’s School of Engineering and Graduate School of Business. Jonathan’s teaching asks students to consider the never-simple relationship between innovation and progress — recognizing how each new technology brings choices and responsibilities.