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  1. Daphne Koller (Hebrew: דפנה קולר; born August 27, 1968) is an Israeli-American computer scientist. She was a professor in the department of computer science at Stanford University [4] and a MacArthur Foundation fellowship recipient. [1]

  2. Professor Daphne Koller Contact Information: home | biography | research | papers | my group courses | professional activities | FAQ | personal

  3. Articles 1–20. ‪CEO and Founder, insitro‬ - ‪‪Cited by 112,073‬‬ - ‪machine learning‬ - ‪computational biology‬ - ‪computer vision‬ - ‪artificial intelligence‬.

  4. Daphne Koller - Biography. I am the Rajeev Motwani Professor in the Computer Science Department at Stanford University. I joined the department in September 1995. I also have a courtesy appointment in the Department of Pathology.

  5. Nov 16, 2022 · We’re entering a “new era of science”—we finally have enough data and technology to truly enable better drugs for patients, says insitro CEO Daphne Koller.

  6. www.insitro.com › leadership › daphne-kollerDaphne Koller - insitro

    Daphne Koller is CEO and founder of insitro, a machine learning-driven drug discovery and development company transforming the way drugs are discovered and delivered to patients.

  7. Daphne Koller is the founder and leader of CURIS, Stanford's summer research experience for undergraduates in computer science - a program that has trained more than 500 students in its decade of existence.

  8. www.nature.com › articles › d41573/019/00115-7Daphne Koller - Nature

    Jul 9, 2019 · By 2016, she was the chief computing officer at Alphabets ageing-focused biotech Calico. She then founded the biotech insitro in 2018 to explicitly generate high-quality...

  9. Daphne Koller. I was born in Jerusalem, Israel. I came to the U.S. for my PhD on July 4, 1989 (Independence Day), and have lived here ever since with my husband, Dan Avida I like to read, listen to music, hike, and play with my two daughters.

  10. Nov 3, 2020 · Daphne Koller is betting artificial intelligence can change that dynamic. Twenty years ago, when she first started using artificial intelligence to venture into medicine and biology, Koller was stymied by a lack of data.