Stanford University
Showing 251-300 of 1,442 Results
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Christian Tanja
Senior Assistant Director of Admission, Knight-Hennessy Scholars
Current Role at StanfordSenior Assistant Director of Admission, Knight-Hennessy Scholars
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Victoria Rose Tanoury, RN, MSN, AGPCNP-BC
Affiliate, IT Services
BioVictoria Tanoury is a board-certified Adult-Gerontology Nurse Practitioner and certified Movement Disorders Advanced Practice Provider specializing in the diagnosis, treatment, and management of Parkinson’s Disease, essential tremor, dystonia, and other movement disorders. She has extensive experience in deep brain stimulation (DBS) programming and management for these conditions.
Victoria earned her bachelor’s degree in nursing from the University of Washington and spent eight years specializing in neurology and neurosurgery before furthering her education. In 2014, she joined the Stanford Movement Disorders team as the lead nurse coordinator, where she oversaw the DBS review board and coordinated the multidisciplinary Huntington’s Disease and ataxia clinic, which received designation as a Huntington Disease Society of America Center of Excellence. In addition, she co-led a local ataxia support group recognized by the National Ataxia Foundation.
While completing her master’s degree at UCSF, Victoria participated in a dual program that combined the Adult-Gerontology Nurse Practitioner curriculum with coursework in occupational and environmental health studies. This experience allowed her to explore environmental factors affecting neurological conditions and observe workplace exposures linked to neurological symptoms. Upon finishing her nurse practitioner program, she rejoined the Stanford Movement Disorders team, where she is actively involved in the DBS program, performing initial evaluations, assisting with patient selection, and programming patients following their surgery. -
Sami Gamal-Eldin Tantawi
Professor of Particle Physics and Astrophysics, Emeritus
BioFor over a decade I have advocated for dedicated research efforts on the basic physics of room temperature high gradient structures and new initiatives for the associated RF systems. This required demanding multidisciplinary collaboration to harness limited resources. The basic elements of the research needed to be inclusive to address not only the fundamentals of accelerator structures but also the fundamentals of associated technologies such as RF manipulation and novel microwave power sources. These basic research efforts were not bundled with specific developments for an application or a general program. The emerging technologies promise a broad, transformational impact.
With this underlying philosophy in mind, in 2006 the US High Gradient Research Collaboration for which I am the spokesman was formed. SLAC is the host of this collaboration, which comprises MIT, ANL, University of Maryland and University of Colorado, NRL and a host of SBIR companies. This led to the revitalization of this research area worldwide. The international collaborative effort grew to include KEK in Japan, INFN, Frascati in Italy, the Cockcroft Institute in the UK, and the CLIC team at CERN.
This effort led to a new understanding of the geometrical effects affecting high gradient operations. The collaborative work led to new advances in understanding the gradient limits of photonic band gap structures. Now we have a new optimization methodology for accelerator structure geometries and ongoing research on alternate and novel materials. These efforts doubled the usable gradient in normal conducting high gradient linacs to more than 100 MV/m, thus revitalizing the spread of the technology to other applications including compact Inverse Compton Scattering gamma-ray sources for national security applications, and compact proton linacs for cancer therapy. -
Yun Tao
Student Svcs Offcr 1, Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine
Current Role at StanfordClerkship Program Coordinator
Department of Anesthesia
Stanford University School of Medicine