His research in medical image analysis has received several awards, including the “Creative and Novel Ideas in HIV Research Award” in 2014. He is currently the principal investigator of several NIH funded projects, including a U24 and R01s. Additionally, thirteen of his mentees hold faculty appointments at other universities.
Research Experience
Was an Instructor at Harvard Medical School, a research scientist at IBM Research, and an Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvania; Currently, he is a Professor in Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences and (by courtesy) in Electrical Engineering at Stanford University, and the founder of the CNS Lab.
Education
Ph.D. from the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Advisor information not provided
Background
Research interests: computational science aimed at identifying biomedical phenotypes improving the mechanistic understanding, diagnosis, and treatment of neuropsychiatric disorders. His research embraces the diversity and complexity of disorders through unbiased, machine learning-based searches across measurements derived from highly-dimensional biological, neuroimaging, cognitive, and behavioral data.