Published multiple papers, such as “(A)I Am Not a Lawyer, But…: Engaging Legal Experts towards Responsible LLM Policies for Legal Advice” accepted by ACM FAcct 2024; “Safeguarding Human Values: Rethinking US Law for Generative AI’s Societal Impacts” publicly available in AI and Ethics; Participated in numerous workshops and conferences, including CHAI 2025 Workshop, Privacy Law Scholars Conference 2025, etc.
Research Experience
Postdoctoral researcher at the Princeton Center for Information Technology Policy; Affiliate Faculty member at the University of Washington School of Law.
Education
Earned a doctorate degree from the University of Washington School of Law, under the guidance of Tadayoshi Kohno, Ryan Calo, and Amy X. Zhang.
Background
Research interests include AI ethics, social impacts of AI technologies, and the development of socio-technical mitigations. Postdoctoral researcher at the Princeton Center for Information Technology Policy, working with Peter Henderson. Also an Affiliate Faculty member at the University of Washington School of Law, focusing on interdisciplinary research ranging from legal analysis to large-scale human subject studies.
Miscellany
Interests include collaborating with scholars from diverse backgrounds (law, computer science, sociology, psychology) and career levels; Received support from Fulbright Scholarship, OpenAI Democratic Inputs to AI Grant, Schmidt Science Award, and Consumer Reports Tech Fellowship.