Stanford University
Showing 101-150 of 290 Results
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Philipp Reineke
Ph.D. Student in Management Science and Engineering, admitted Spring 2019
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsIn his dissertation research, Phil examines Decentralized Autonomous Organizations (DAOs) and decentralization more generally.
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Martin Reinhard
Professor (Research) of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Emeritus
BioReinhard studies the fate of organic substances in the subsurface environment and develops technologies for the remediation of groundwater contaminated with chlorinated and non-chlorinated hydrocarbon compounds. His research is concerned with mechanistic aspects of chemical and biological transformation reactions in soils, natural waters, and treatment systems.
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Anka Reuel
Ph.D. Student in Computer Science, admitted Autumn 2022
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsCompared to the technical advancements in AI, the area of technical AI ethics is significantly understudied. Novel, complex autonomous systems are being developed without devoting enough time to their potential negative implications and how they can be mitigated. Given the increasing use of such systems throughout society, this discrepancy sparked Anka's interest in contributing to research in responsible AI, both from a technical and a governance perspective.
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Antonio Ricco
Research Technical Manager 2, Electrical Engineering - Integrated Circuits Laboratory
Current Role at StanfordOn assignment to NASA Ames Research Center as Chief Technologist for Small Payloads
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Stephen E Richardson
Professional-NX, Electrical Engineering
BioPublications: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=O3IrDzwAAAAJ
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Laura Rijns
Postdoctoral Scholar, Chemical Engineering
BioDr. Laura Rijns was born in the Netherlands (Nov 10, 1996) and is currently a postdoc at Stanford University with prof. Zhenan Bao in close collaboration with prof. Karl Deisseroth, focussed on improving the communication between electronic materials and living tissue. Control on the cellular side (through genetic modification) is combined with control on the material side (through molecular engineering) to manipulate neural circuit activity both in-vitro in living neurons and in-vivo in living animals.
Laura obtained her PhD (2023) in Biomedical Engineering “cum laude” from Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e) with prof. Patricia Dankers and prof. E.W. (Bert) Meijer. Supramolecular hydrogels as mimics of the extracellular matrix were developed for cell and organoid culture.
Prior to graduate school, Laura received her BSc (2017) and MSc (2019) in Biomedical Engineering at TU/e in the lab of prof. E.W. (Bert) Meijer, focused on supramolecular assemblies. During her undergraduate studies, she was the Lab Captain of the iGEM TU/e 2016 team, studying regulatable scaffold proteins. In 2017, she worked at UC Santa Barbara in the group of prof. Songi Han, studying liquid-liquid phase separated coacervate polymers. In 2019 and 2023, she worked at EPFL (Switzerland) with prof. Maartje Bastings, studying multivalent interactions using DNA origami.