Stanford University
Showing 24,001-24,050 of 36,201 Results
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Emily R. Paris
Ph.D. Student in Earth System Science, admitted Autumn 2020
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsInvestigating the limits of life on Earth and beyond
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David J. Park, MD, PhD, FCNS
Clinical Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsThe goal of our Laboratory is to improve patients’ care and outcomes by analyzing clinical data from thousands of patients treated at our institution. Our current primary areas of interest are benign tumors, brain and spine metastases, and neurogenetic disorders.
Our lab is led by Dr. Steven D. Chang and Dr. David J. Park and proudly hosts talented young clinical scientists from around the world.
Link: https://med.stanford.edu/neurosurgery/research/NeuroOncLab.html -
Eujin Park
Assistant Professor of Education
BioDr. Park is an Assistant Professor at the Graduate School of Education at Stanford University. Dr. Park draws upon critical theories of racialization, Asian American Studies, and community engaged research to examine how Asian American families negotiate with race in and through educational institutions. She recently conducted an ethnographic investigation of community-based educational spaces in the Chicago-area Asian American community, which highlighted the role of community spaces in youths’ educational experiences and understandings of racializing discourses. In addition to publishing and presenting her work in multiple academic venues, Dr. Park draws upon her research in her work with Asian American and other youth of color in community-based organizations. She earned her Ph.D. in Educational Policy Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison with a concentration in Social Sciences and a Minor in Qualitative Methods. She also holds an M.A. from UW-Madison and a B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley.
Prior to joining the faculty, Dr. Park was an IDEAL Provostial Fellow, part of the inaugural cohort of early-career scholars of race and ethnicity at Stanford University. Prior to that, she was a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the Institute for Research on Race and Public Policy (IRRPP) at the University of Illinois-Chicago. -
Eunkyung Angela Park, MD, PhD
Clinical Associate Professor, Radiology - Rad/Nuclear Medicine
BioDr. Eunkyung Angela Park is a Clinical Associate Professor (affiliated) at the Department of Radiology at Stanford and Nuclear Medicine Staff Physician at Palo Alto VA Medical Center. She takes care of patients having cancer, various diseases in the brain, heart and other organs through molecular imaging and targeted radiopharmaceutical therapies. Dr. Park graduated from Seoul National University College of Medicine and completed clinical and research training at Seoul National University Hospital, Yale University PET Center, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. She served as Associate Section Chief in Nuclear Medicine at University of Utah before joining Stanford. Her main professional interests include global promotion of nuclear medicine, clinical/translational research in nuclear neurology, and operational system innovation. Dr. Park is particularly interested in early and accurate differential diagnoses of mixed neurodegenerative disorders by using brain PET imaging with various radiopharmaceuticals targeting glucose metabolism, amyloid, tau, neuroreceptors and transporters. She enjoys traveling, practicing yoga, playing tennis and anything about music.
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Hyun Suk Park 朴賢淑 (she/her)
Assistant Professor of East Asian Languages and Cultures
BioMy primary field of research is Korean literature and culture from the seventeenth through the nineteenth century. As a scholar of Korean literature both in Korean and literary Sinitic (hanmun 漢文) by training, my research is deeply engaged with the East Asian cultural tradition. My research interests include the intersections between literature and performance, the history of gender and sexuality, the comparative history of slavery, and the cultural history of natural disasters in early modern East Asia and beyond.
My first book manuscript, Government Courtesans in Military Uniforms: State Slavery, Gender, and Performance in Chosŏn Korea, 1392–1910 (forthcoming; Harvard University Asia Center, 2027), explores the cultural production of government courtesans (kwan’gi 官妓) at the nexus of the studies of slavery, gender, and performance in Korean literature. In this work, I illuminate how the spectacular performances of courtesans, offered in state events, were involved in the constitution and reproduction of state power of Chosŏn. I also examine how courtesan performances represent state power as multivalent and unstable through the frequent incorporation of heterogeneous elements, as exemplified by martial entertainment offered by cross-dressing courtesans.
I am currently in the process of designing a new research project that explores the same-sex intimacy created by the practice of letter writing between the literati of Chosŏn and Qing outside of diplomatic venues. I am also developing a long-term research project in environmental humanities that focuses on climate disasters in seventeenth-century East Asia and explores the new methodologies of writing a literary and cultural history that considers climate as an actant.
Before joining Stanford in 2025, I have taught at UCLA (2018–2025), Seoul National University (2016–2018), and UC Berkeley (2013–2016). -
Jee-Young Park
Korean Studies Librarian, East Asia Library
BioJee-Young Park is responsible for developing and maintaining the Korean Studies Collection and she provides reference services to support the research and teaching needs of the faculty and students at Stanford University. Prior to joining Stanford University, Jee-Young was a Korean Studies Librarian at the University of Chicago. She is a graduate of the San Jose State University School of Library and Information Science and the University of California, Berkeley, where she earned her Bachelor of Arts degree in Japanese Language and Culture.
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Jon Park, MD, FRCSC
Saunders Family Professor
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsNon-fusion dynamic spinal stabilization, artificial disc technologies, and regenerative spinal technologies.
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Joon Sung Park
Affiliate, Program-Bernstein, M.
BioJoon Sung Park is a computer science PhD student in the Human-Computer Interaction and Natural Language Processing groups at Stanford University. His work introduces the concept of, and the techniques for building generative agents -- computational software agents that simulate human behavior. His work has won best paper awards at UIST and CHI, as well as multiple best paper nominations and other paper awards at CHI, CSCW, and ASSETS, and has been reported in venues such as Nature, Science, NBC, The New York Times, The Times, and The Guardian. Joon is recognized with the Microsoft Research Ph.D. Fellowship (2022), Terry Winograd Fellowship (2021), and Siebel Scholar Award (2019).
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Jun Hyung Park
Research and Development Science and Engineer 1, Rad/Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford
Current Role at StanfordI joined in Cyclotron and radiochemstry facility in 2014. I focus on routine radiopharmaceutical production, including 18F tracers (18F-Flumazenil, 18F-FTC-146, 18F-FLT, 18F Arag, 18F-FSPG etc.); 11C tracers (11C UCB-J, 11C-raclopride, 11C-PIB, 11C-methionine, 11C DPA-713 etc.); 15O-H2O and 68Ga-DOTATATE radiochemistry for clinical use and supporting various of pre-clinical studies.
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Junyoung Park
Postdoctoral Scholar, Neurology and Neurological Sciences
BioDr. Jun Young graduated from the Department of Biostatistics at the School of Public Health, Seoul National University, Korea. His major field of study is biostatistics, with a specific focus on the application of machine learning and statistical analysis to medical imaging and genetic data. During his doctoral studies, he concentrated on two primary research areas. Firstly, he dedicated himself to the development of deep learning models for medical images, primarily centered on T1-MRI and cognitive function test images related to Alzheimer's Disease. Secondly, he engaged in extensive genome-wide association analyses of medical images associated with Alzheimer's Disease, using statistical algorithms to uncover novel insights into the genetic factors contributing to this complex condition. Currently, as a postdoctoral fellow at the Greicius Lab at Stanford, he aims to develop statistical methods to discover novel structural variants and model polygenetic risk scores using long-read sequencing data.