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Outdoor headshot photo of a smiling Black male faculty member, Dr. Kyle Daniels, Assistant Professor of Genetics at Stanford University.

Kyle Daniels - Assistant Professor of Genetics

Bio-X Affiliated Faculty

Dr. Kyle Daniels obtained his BS in Biochemistry from the University of Maryland College Park in 2010, conducting undergraduate research with Dr. Dorothy Beckett, PhD. He obtained his PhD in Biochemistry with a certificate in Structural Biology and Biophysics. His dissertation is titled "Kinetics of Coupled Binding and Conformational Change in Proteins and RNA" and was completed in the laboratory of Dr. Terrence G. Oas, PhD. Dr. Daniels performed postdoctoral training with Dr. Wendell A.

Headshot photo of a smiling white female faculty member with long dark hair and glasses, Dr. Jeannette Bohg, Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University.

Jeannette Bohg - Assistant Professor of Computer Science

Bio-X Affiliated Faculty

Dr. Jeannette Bohg is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University. She was a group leader at the Autonomous Motion Department (AMD) of the MPI for Intelligent Systems until September 2017. Before joining AMD in January 2012, Dr. Bohg was a PhD student at the Division of Robotics, Perception and Learning (RPL) at KTH in Stockholm. In her thesis, she proposed novel methods towards multi-modal scene understanding for robotic grasping.

Headshot photo of a smiling white female faculty member, Dr. Varvara Kirchner, Associate Professor of Surgery at Stanford University.

Varvara Kirchner - Associate Professor of Surgery (Abdominal Transplantation) and (by courtesy) of Pediatrics

Bio-X Affiliated Faculty

Dr. Varvara Kirchner completed her medical school, surgical residency and multi-organ transplant fellowship in adult and pediatric liver, pancreas, kidney transplantation and total pancreatectomy with islet auto-transplantation at the University of Minnesota. She underwent further training in living donor liver transplantation and hepatobiliary surgery at the Asan Medical Center, Seoul, South Korea.

Outdoor headshot photo of a smiling white male faculty member, Dr. Mac Schwager, Associate Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics at Stanford University.

Mac Schwager - Associate Professor of Aeronautics & Astronautics

Bio-X Affiliated Faculty

Dr. Mac Schwager is an Associate Professor in the Aeronautics and Astronautics Department at Stanford University. He earned his BS from Stanford in 2000, his MS from MIT in 2005, and his PhD from MIT in 2009. Dr. Schwager was a postdoc jointly at UPenn and MIT from 2009 to 2012, and was an assistant professor at Boston University from 2012 to 2015, before joining Stanford Aero-Astro in 2015. His research interests are in distributed algorithms for coordination, estimation, and learning in groups of robots and animals.

Outdoor headshot photo of a smiling female faculty member, Dr. Jade Benjamin-Chung, Assistant Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health at Stanford University.

Jade Benjamin-Chung - Assistant Professor of Epidemiology & Population Health

Bio-X Affiliated Faculty

Dr. Jade Benjamin-Chung, PhD MPH, is an Assistant Professor at Stanford University in the Department of Epidemiology and Population Health and Chan Zuckerberg Biohub Investigator. Her group conducts research to identify interventions to control, eliminate, or eradicate environmentally-transmitted infectious diseases, including malaria, diarrhea, soil-transmitted helminths, and influenza.

Headshot photo of a smiling Asian male faculty member, Dr. Brian Hie, Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering at Stanford University.

Brian Hie - Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering

Bio-X Affiliated Faculty

Dr. Brian Hie is an Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering and Data Science at Stanford University, the Dieter Schwarz Foundation Stanford Data Science Faculty Fellow, and an Innovation Investigator at Arc Institute. Dr. Hie supervises the Laboratory of Evolutionary Design, which conducts research at the intersection of biology and machine learning.

Headshot photo of a smiling female faculty member with long dark hair, Dr. Roxana Daneshjou, Assistant Professor of Biomedical Data Science and Dermatology at Stanford University.

Roxana Daneshjou - Assistant Professor of Biomedical Data Science and of Dermatology

Bio-X Affiliated Faculty

Dr. Roxana Daneshjou studied Bioengineering at Rice University before matriculating to Stanford School of Medicine where she completed her MD and a PhD in Genetics with Dr. Russ Altman as part of the medical scientist training program. She completed dermatology residency at Stanford as part of the research track and completed a postdoc in Biomedical Data Science with Dr. James Zou.

Headshot photo of a smiling white male faculty member, Dr. Jonathan Klein, Professor of Pediatrics at Stanford University.

Jonathan Klein - Marron & Mary Elizabeth Kendrick Professor of Pediatrics

Bio-X Affiliated Faculty

Dr. Jonathan Klein's research interests include preventive services, confidentiality, access to care, youth development, tobacco control, and the translation of research into clinical and public health practice and global child health policy. Current projects address engagement of clinical leaders in countries and communities in health care delivery improvement, accountability measurement, and advocacy for adolescent health, comprehensive sexuality education, and non-communicable disease prevention.

Headshot photo of a smiling Asian male faculty member, Dr. Paul Chang, Assistant Professor of Medicine at Stanford University.

Paul Cheng - Assistant Professor of Medicine (Cardiovascular Medicine)

Bio-X Affiliated Faculty

Dr. Paul Cheng is a Cardiologist at Stanford University School of Medicine in the Department of Medicine and a member of the Cardiovascular Research Institute. Dr. Cheng received his BEng in Chemical Engineering and BSc in biology at MIT. He subsequently completed his MD/PhD at UCSF working in the Srivastava lab studying how extracellular morphogenic signals affect cardiac development and fate determination of cardiac progenitors. Dr. Cheng completed internal medicine residency and cardiology fellowship at Stanford. His current clinical focus is in amyloidosis and cardio-oncology.

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