I am currently a researcher at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), an independent population health research organization based at the University of Washington School of Medicine. I work in the Resource Tracking division on the Domestic Health Accounts: Dementia Spending sub-team under the supervision of Joseph Dieleman, PhD and Amy Lastuka, PhD. Our project is estimating the economic burden of dementia care in the US and globally using survey and administrative data. Cost estimates are created by processing, analyzing, visualizing and modeling this data in R using standard data science and statistical methods. I presented a poster detailing the results of our US work at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference 2023 in Amsterdam. I also host weekly office hours to provide R programming support for fellow researchers and analysts at the institute as an R expert.

Previously, I was a master’s student/research assistant working on the Open Case Studies project. This project is a product of the Johns Hopkins Data Science Lab in the Department of Biostatistics at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. In December 2021, I graduated with a master’s degree from the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering. My thesis work was about Open Case Studies and advised by Carrie Wright, PhD. Learn more about my work at Hopkins in the Projects tab.

Throughout my graduate program I’ve focused my studies on neuroengineering and biomedical data science. Through my courses and research in graduate school, I was able to wrangle, analyze, and visualize real biological data including brain images, electrophysiology data, Covid-19 cases and more.

I am excited by the power of data science to extract meaning and information from data. Computational methods and tool-kits are enabling novel discoveries and innovations in all facets of life, especially with artificial intelligence and machine learning. As new technologies are developed, special care must be taken to ensure it is used ethically and responsibly. As my career progresses, I’d like to help ensure that AI/ML is used to promote more social good and minimize possible damages.  

See my CV on Overleaf.

My work at IHME is developed using Bitbucket for version control instead of GitHub due to privacy concerns, data use agreements (DUA) and the sensitive nature of the datasets we use. For this reason my most recent work is not open-access and my contribution history since starting at IHME is non-existent on GitHub.