Stanford University


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  • Peiqi Chen, MA

    Peiqi Chen, MA

    Social Science Research Professional 1, Stanford-Surgery Policy Improvement Research and Education Center

    BioPeiqi Chen, M.A., B.A., is a Social Science Research Professional at the S-SPIRE Center. With a bachelor’s degree in Sociology and Psychology, and a certificate in non-profit organization management from the University of Iowa. Followed by a master’s degree in Social Sciences from the University of Chicago, Peiqi has developed a robust knowledge and skill set in various research methodologies and research tools. In her MA program in Social Science at the University of Chicago and writing a thesis about family planning policy evaluation on women’s maternity rights. At S-SPIRE, she assists clinical researchers with qualitative data gathering and analysis. Before attending Stanford, she completed two internships at nonprofit organizations. She conducted research on social stigma toward COVID19 patient and front-line health workers during the pandemic. Her research interests lie in sexual health, the evaluation of policy outcomes, and the improvement of social welfare for underrepresented populations.

  • Po-Han Chen

    Po-Han Chen

    Ph.D. Student in Electrical Engineering, admitted Winter 2021

    BioPo-Han Chen is an EE Ph.D. student at Stanford University supervised by Prof. Priyanka Raina. He received his B.S. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) and M.S. in Electrical Engineering from National Tsing Hua University (Taiwan) in 2016 and 2018 respectively. Before joining Stanford, he was a digital circuit designer at MediaTek where he worked on developing hardware architectures of image processing pipeline. He is interested in designing hardware accelerators. Most of his previous works were related to computational photography algorithms such as digital refocusing. Currently, He is focusing on analyzing and designing architecture of CGRAs to create high-performance, energy-efficient, and reconfigurable computing platforms.

  • QiLiang “Q” Chen

    QiLiang “Q” Chen

    Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine (Adult Pain)

    Current Research and Scholarly InterestsMy research focuses on understanding the plasticity in pain-modulating circuits in pathological pain states. I started with defining a basic functional framework that links the pain-transmission system to the pain-modulation system, through which I explored the central mechanism of sensitization in chronic pain after a peripheral injury. Based on this fundamental observation, my work now focuses on investigating the pathophysiology and the role of endogenous opioids in chronic pain related to brain injury and other forms of trauma, a topic especially relevant to chronic post-traumatic pain sufferers. Clinically, I am exploring the use of advance image-guidance in pain interventions for treating complex headache and craniofacial pain. Ultimately, I hope to translate these fundamental knowledge and technologies to patient care and provide potential new therapeutic targets to help those with pain after head injury and polytrauma.

  • Raymond Chen

    Raymond Chen

    Lead Undergraduate Advising Director, Academic Advising Operations

    Current Role at StanfordLead Undergraduate Advising Director

  • Zhenlin Chen

    Zhenlin Chen

    Ph.D. Student in Energy Science and Engineering, admitted Summer 2023

    BioZhenlin (Richard) Chen is a Ph.D. candidate at Stanford's Adam Brandt lab, focuses on greenhouse gas emissions from oil and gas. His work primarily revolves around evaluating ground sensor technologies for methane detection and quantification ability. His methodological approach blends engineering principles, field data collection, and applied statistics. Chen is exploring AI-driven frameworks, particularly large language models, to refine energy data extraction and enhance the OPGEE model through private data fine-tuning and reinforcement learning. His emphasis remains on domain-specific tasks, aiming for efficiency in terms of latency and cost. He pursued his undergraduate studies in environmental science at Cornell University and holds a master's in Atmosphere and Energy Engineering from Stanford.