Stanford University
Showing 1-50 of 309 Results
-
Maricela Abarca
Data Curator for Interdisciplinary Sustainability, Data Management Services
BioI provide resources and consultation in data management and analysis. I offer workshops for Python as a Carpentries instructor and for data management planning. I help student, faculty, and staff researchers with data management and sharing plans as well as receiving attribution for their research products, including data and software. I advise on repository selection (including Stanford Digital Repository deposits) and other data management practices. I also offer introductory consultations on data science and artificial intelligence methods.
My background includes natural history collection stewardship, both of physical objects and their associated data, and biodiversity informatics. I have also worked on research intelligence (aggregating publication and research output). -
Vijoy Abraham
Assistant University Librarian for Research Data Services, University Librarian's Office
Current Role at StanfordAssistant University Librarian for Research Data Services, University Librarian's Office
-
Hanna Ahn
Assistant University Archivist, Special Collections
Current Role at StanfordAssistant University Archivist
-
Benjamin Albritton
Rare Books Curator, Special Collections
Current Role at StanfordCurator of Rare Books and Early Manuscripts
Curator for Classics -
Michael Angeletti
Moving Image Digitization Specialist, Library Technology
Current Role at StanfordI work to reformat and preserve historically important moving image recordings held by the Stanford University Libraries. Our facility is located in Redwood City, California, in the building where the AMPEX corporation did much of its early work on audiotape and videotape recording systems. Aside from the work of reformatting magnetic media, our workgroup at SMPL contributes to the more broad efforts of the AV preservation community through collaboration on special projects and consultation with other archives, universities and research institutions.
-
Mie Araki
Library Spclst 3, Music Library
Current Role at StanfordAs an acquisitions & receiving specialist at MUS, I do order and receive scores & sound/video recordings, and (most importantly) open many many boxes!
-
Cathy Aster
Senior Digital Library Services Manager, Library Technology
Current Role at StanfordServices Manager, Digital Library Systems & Services
- Spotlight Exhibits
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations -
Kate Barron
Research Data Curator, Data Management Services
BioAs a Research Data Curator in the Center for Interdisciplinary Digital Research (CIDR), I help preserve and document research data. My goal is to ensure that the Stanford Libraries' data collections are discoverable and reusable by the university community.
-
Tamar Barzel
Head of Music Library and Archive of Recorded Sound, Music Library
Current Role at StanfordHead Librarian, Music Library and Archive of Recorded Sound.
-
Benjamin Bates
Operations and Collections Specialist, Archive of Recorded Sound
Current Role at StanfordOperations and Collections Specialist (OCS), Archive of Recorded Sound
-
Andrew Berger
IT Systems Analyst 3, Library Technology
BioI am the Repository Manager for the Stanford Digital Repository (SDR). I work on the Product and Service Management Team in the Digital Library Systems and Services unit. In my capacity as repository manager, I am responsible for:
- Monitoring the SDR to ensure that it is operating smoothly
- Outreach, training, and documentation for SDR users
- Working with software development teams and operations staff to maintain and add functionality to the SDR -
Keith Bisaillon
Library Spclst 4, Music Library
BioMember of Music Library staff since 1991. Primary responsibilities are cataloging scores and providing internal desktop support for Music Library staff.
-
Richenda Brim
Associate Director, Preservation Services, Preservation
Current Role at StanfordAs the Associate Director for Preservation at Stanford Libraries I lead the preservation program for a network of 15 libraries holding a variety of formats. Through the complementary teamwork of two units, Collection Care and Conservation Services, the Preservation department stabilizes, repairs, houses, and prepares circulating collections, special collections and archives for storage, use, digitization, and exhibition.
-
Peter Broadwell
Head of AI Modeling & Inference, Research Data Services Admin
Current Role at StanfordManager, AI Modeling & Inference, Research Data Services, Stanford University Libraries
-
Ellen Buckley
Librarian 2, University Librarian's Office
BioI support the Libraries' website and other programs and projects.
-
Joshua Capitanio
Curator for East & Southeast Asian Studies and Religious Studies Collections, East Asia Library
Current Role at StanfordCurator for East & Southeast Asian Studies
Curator for Religious Studies Collections
Public Services Librarian, East Asia Library -
Ebru Cetin Milci
Metadata Specialist for Turkish Resources & Complex Copy, Metadata Department
BioEbru Cetin Milci
Metadata Specialist for Turkish Resources & Complex Copy
PhD, Marmara University, Istanbul, Turkey, Turkish Philology (2014)
Dr. Ebru Çetin Milci serves as a Metadata Specialist for Turkish Resources & Complex Copy at Stanford University. She is in charge of cataloging a diverse array of materials, including modern and historical Turkish resources, with a particular focus on monographs, lithographs, political and cultural ephemera, as well as Stanford Library's extensive Ottoman world holdings.
Ebru Çetin Milci has over 15 years of experience in teaching Turkish language and literature at high schools and Galatasaray University. Beyond her contributions to academia, Dr. Cetin Milci has also held positions at companies such as Facebook, where she has shared her language expertise.
Dr. Çetin Milci's expertise as a linguist extends to Arabic, Persian, Armenian, and various branches of Turkic languages, while her academic research centers on the history of Turkish/Turkic languages, particularly the 17th and 18th-century Gregorian Zone Kipchak Turkish law texts that was written with Armenian scripts. She is proficient in Turkish, Ottoman, Kipchak branch Turkic languages, Armenian, Arabic, and Persian. -
Juanita Chabot
Library Spclst 4, Earth Sciences Library
BioOperations Manager, Branner Earth Sciences Library and Map Collections.
-
Angana Chatterji
Research Fellow, Center For Human Rights And International Justice Stanfor, Tech Support
BioAngana P. Chatterji is a Research Fellow at the Center for Human Rights and International Justice Stanford University. Chatterji is the Founding Chair, Initiative on Political Conflict, Gender and People’s Rights at the Center for Race and Gender, and Research Anthropologist, at the University of California, Berkeley. Chatterji’s work since 1989 has been rooted in local knowledge, witness to post/colonial, decolonial conditions of grief, dispossession, agency, and affective solidarity. A cultural anthropologist and interdisciplinary scholar of South Asia, she is also affiliated with the Institute for South Asia Studies and is a Research Fellow at the Center for Human Rights at University of California, Berkeley. She is also a Global Fellow at the Center for Law and Transformation, Chr. Michelsen Institute and the University of Bergen; and a Distinguished Fellow, Rafto Foundation for Human Rights, in Bergen, Norway. Her foundational investigations with colleagues in Indian-administered Kashmir includes inquiry into unknown, unmarked and mass graves. Chatterji’s recent scholarship focuses on political conflict and coloniality in Kashmir; prejudicial citizenship in India; and violence as agentized by Hindu nationalism. Her research also engages questions of memory and belonging, and legacies of conflict across South Asia. Chatterji has served on human rights commissions and offered expert testimony to Indian Commissions of Inquiry, United Nations, European Parliament, United Kingdom Parliament, and United States Congress, and has been variously awarded for her work, including with a Certificate of Special Congressional Recognition in 2020. Her sole and co-authored publications include: Breaking Worlds: Religion, Law, and Nationalism in Majoritarian India; Majoritarian State: How Hindu Nationalism is Changing India; Conflicted Democracies and Gendered Violence: The Right to Heal; Contesting Nation: Gendered Violence in South Asia; Notes on the Postcolonial Present; Kashmir: The Case for Freedom; Violent Gods: Hindu Nationalism in India’s Present; Narratives from Orissa; and reports: Access to Justice for Women: India’s Response to Sexual Violence in Conflict and Social Upheaval; BURIED EVIDENCE: Unknown, Unmarked and Mass Graves in Kashmir.
-
Freja H Cole
Sound Archives Metadata Librarian, Archive of Recorded Sound
BioAs Sound Archives Metadata Librarian, I create metadata primarily for audio and video recordings in the Archive of Recorded Sound. I describe both physical and digitized materials in order to make them more accessible for our users. Before arriving at Stanford, I worked in public services at the Indiana University Cook Music Library.
-
Catherine Nicole Coleman
Research Director, Humanities+Design, Center for Interdisciplinary Digital Research
Affiliate, ClassicsBioNicole is Digital Research Architect for the Stanford University Libraries and Research Director for Humanities+Design, a research lab at the Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis. Nicole works at the intersection of the digital library and digital scholarship as a lead architect in the design and development of practical research services. She is currently leading an initiative within the Library to identify and enact applications of artificial intelligence —machine perception, machine learning, machine reasoning, and language recognition— to make the collections of maps, photographs, manuscripts, data sets and other assets more easily discoverable, accessible, and analyzable.
At Humanities + Design she has led the design and development of numerous tools for data visualization and analysis including Palladio, Breve, and Data Pen. The lab encourages and supports collaboration between researchers from the humanities and design to encode interpretive method in tools for data analysis. Lessons learned in that work have proven essential to improving the design of machine learning based tools for research.