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Bio-X Affiliated FacultyDr. Ré's group works on the fundamentals of the next generation of data management systems, including databases, theory, and machine learning.
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Christopher Potts - Director of the Center for the Study of Language & Information (CSLI) and Professor of Linguistics and (by courtesy) of Computer Science
Bio-X Affiliated FacultyDr. Christopher Potts's group uses computational methods to explore how emotion is expressed in language and how linguistic production and interpretation are influenced by the context of utterance. This research combines methods from linguistics, cognitive psychology, and computer science, in the service of both scientific discovery and technology development. In many cases, they have taken theoretical models of language use and applied techniques from machine learning to scale those models for use on massive data sets and in complex environments.
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Christopher O. Barnes - Assistant Professor of Biology and (by courtesy) of Structural Biology
Bio-X Affiliated FacultyDr. Christopher Barnes's lab is at the intersection of medicine, basic science and engineering. Viruses are inextricably linked to the host cells that they infect. Thus, investigating viral-host interactions is essential to understand the mechanisms of viral entry, replication, pathogenesis, and the host’s ability to respond to viral pathogens. The Barnes lab excels in leveraging interdisciplinary approaches to address fundamental principles of viral-host interactions for therapeutic benefit.
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Christopher N. Ta - Professor of Ophthalmology
Bio-X Affiliated FacultyDr. Ta's clinical studies include dry-eyes in graft-versus-host disease, efficacy study of Zymar and Vigamox, intravitreous injections. -
Christopher Manning - Thomas M. Siebel Professor in Machine Learning and Professor of Computer Science
Bio-X Affiliated FacultyDr. Manning works on systems that can intelligently process and produce human languages. -
Christopher Lowe - Assistant Professor of Biology
Bio-X Affiliated FacultyDr. Lowe's current research is focused on the evolution and development, specifically the evolution of the deuterostomes. -
Christopher Francis - Professor of Earth System Science
Bio-X Affiliated FacultyDr. Francis's research interests center on the molecular, biogeochemical, and ecological aspects of the microbially-mediated cycling of nitrogen and metals in the environment. -
Christopher Bennett - Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine
Bio-X Affiliated FacultyDr. Christopher Bennett is a physician scientist and an Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine. Once a basic scientist focused on genetics and genomics, Dr. Bennett’s work for the last several years has focused on large data-set analyses reflective of multiple multi-institutional studies aimed at better understanding how US emergency departments (and emergency physicians) can increase rates of HIV testing for at- risk patients.
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Christopher Beaulieu - Professor of Radiology (Diagnostic Radiology) and (by courtesy) of Orthopaedic Surgery
Bio-X Affiliated FacultyDr. Beaulieu's current research interests include: three-dimensional computer graphics representation of, medical imaging data, including clinical applications of virtual, colonoscopy and arthroscopy; interactive MRI evaluation of joint, motion. -
Christine Jacobs-Wagner - Dennis Cunningham Professor and Professor of Biology
Bio-X Affiliated FacultyCellular replication is a defining feature of life. But how do cells reproduce themselves? Dr. Christine Jacobs-Wagner's laboratory addresses this fundamental question by probing the governing principles and the spatiotemporal mechanisms that underlie cellular replication, with an emphasis of cell morphogenesis, cell growth, chromosome dynamics and cell cycle regulation. They use bacteria as model systems for two main reasons. First, bacteria lack the complex control systems of eukaryotes (e.g., cyclin/Cdk machinery); yet their multiplication process is remarkably efficient and faithful.