Stanford University


Showing 21-40 of 149 Results

  • Yushen Qian, MD

    Yushen Qian, MD

    Clinical Associate Professor, Radiation Oncology - Radiation Therapy

    BioDr. Qian is a board-certified radiation oncologist and a Clinical Associate Professor in the Stanford University School of Medicine, Department of Radiation Oncology.

    In his clinical practice, he sub-specializes in genitourinary (including prostate and bladder cancer) and Head and Neck malignancies, but also treats a broad spectrum of other disease subsites including lung/thoracic, gastrointestinal, brain, lymphoma, and breast tumors. For each patient, he develops a comprehensive, individualized, and compassionate care plan customized to individual needs. His goal is to deliver the most effective cancer treatment to help patients enjoy the best possible health and quality of life.

    In addition to his clinical practice, Dr. Qian serves as the Medical Director of Radiation Oncology at Stanford South Bay Cancer Center. He also serves as the Radiation Oncology Network Director of Clinical Research and has spearheaded opening of multiple NRG Oncology clinical trials at Stanford South Bay Cancer Center.

    Dr. Qian is also actively involved in the Stanford Radiation Oncology residency program. He created and oversees a monthly mentorship roundtable series to assist residents with multiple aspects of their clinical training and career progression.

    Outside of work, Dr. Qian enjoys spending time with his family and exploring the great outdoors of Northern California.

  • Celine Qin

    Celine Qin

    Student Employee, Dean for Community Engagement and Diversity
    Undergraduate, Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education

    BioCeline Qin is a globally-recognized, award-winning youth changemaker, public speaker, and social activist. Born and raised in California as a daughter to Chinese and Vietnamese immigrants, she is a multi-time social impact founder and community organizer centering racial justice, immigrant rights, multicultural solidarity, and anti-carceral youth equity and life development. In 2026, she became 1 of 20 top U.S. female founders selected by Vital Voices Global Partnership as a Grassroots Voices Fellow, investing in women leaders as “venture catalysts” and bold justice visionaries. As a speaker to now a cumulative audience of 400,000+ youth across 171+ countries worldwide, Celine empowers young people to come forth with their stories and reimagine society in their greatest vision.

    At just 13 years old, Celine established The Reclamation Project, a non-profit grassroots organization spearheading youth-led movements for systems-change, equity, and liberation within her home state and across the globe. Under her vision as Executive Director, The Reclamation Project has mobilized 270,000+ community members, successfully directed 280+ events, campaigns, and projects, and built a coalition of 2,000+ youth mentees, 175+ social and civic organizational partners, and 250+ volunteers since its start in 2020. With 7+ years of active involvement in changemaking and advocacy, BIPOC and immigrant/refugee youth empowerment, and multicultural social development at grassroots, national, and global scales, Celine’s high-impact leadership mirrors her unwavering mission of societal transformation through innovation, learning, and intention. She has advised nearly $20 million dollars in grants and private and government partnerships to empower youth and establish life-affirming resource networks in historically-underrepresented communities, including directly procuring and reinvesting $600,000+ towards multicultural civic advocacy and leadership development programs for young leaders of racial minority, low-income, immigrant/refugee, and other traditionally-overlooked backgrounds.

    Celine’s trailblazing work has been recognized by Princeton University’s Prize in Race Relations, Harvard Project for Asian and International Relations, the Taco Bell Foundation, members of the United States Congress, U.S. Department of State, U.S. Department of Treasury, California Governor Newsom, California Department of Justice and Attorney General Rob Bonta, UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, the United Nations Economic and Social Council, the International Organization for Youth, and further UN affiliates, NGOs, and global impact partners. Her impact can be found in NPR’s CapRadio, ABC 10 Northern California, Porte Global, Her Campus, and numerous national and international platforms. She is additionally an Alexander Hamilton Scholar, Brandon Harrison Social Justice Award Winner for Youth Leadership and Youth Organizing, the youngest recipient of the California Youth Rising Trailblazer Award, and the youngest invited guest lecturer to the University of California, Davis.

    At Stanford University, Celine is a first-generation college student studying History/Sociology, Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity, and Management Science (Organizational Systems, Policy, and Behavior). As a student staff at Stanford's Asian American Activities Center (A3C) with the Centers for Equity, Community, and Leadership and a social impact consultant with Stanford Social Entrepreneurial Students Association, she remains a proactive builder in social impact investing and consulting, social enterprise, fund development, advocacy and justice, and movement organizing and strategy.

  • Jian Qin

    Jian Qin

    Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering

    BioJian Qin is an Associate Professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering at the Stanford University. His research focuses on development of microscopic understanding of structural and physical properties of soft matters by using a combination of analytical theory, scaling argument, numerical computation, and molecular simulation. He worked as a postdoctoral scholar with Juan de Pablo in the Institute for Molecular Engineering at the University of Chicago and with Scott Milner in the Department of Chemical Engineering at the Pennsylvania State University. He received his Ph.D. in the Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science at the University of Minnesota under the supervision of David Morse and Frank Bates. His research covers self-assembly of multi-component polymeric systems, molecular origin of entanglement and polymer melt rheology, coacervation of polyelectrolytes, Coulomb interactions in dielectrically heterogeneous electrolytes, and surface charge polarizations in particulate aggregates in the absence or presence of flow.