New 福利姬自慰researcher named to magazine's 'Innovators under 35' list
Marzyeh Ghassemi, who this fall is joining the University of Toronto as an assistant professor in the departments of computer science and medicine, MIT Technology Review鈥檚 prestigious annual list of Innovators Under 35.
A recent PhD graduate from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Ghassemi is currently a visiting researcher with Alphabet鈥檚 Verily (a Google company) and a part-time post-doctoral researcher at MIT. Her research focuses on developing machine learning algorithms that use diverse clinical data to predict things like the length of patient hospital stays or whether they will need interventions such as blood transfusions or ventilators.
Ghassemi's hiring at 福利姬自慰signals a new partnership between computer science and medicine, as she is the first joint hire in computational medicine.
鈥淯 of T鈥檚 computer science department has established experts in machine learning,鈥 said Ghassemi, who will also join the Vector Institute for Artificial Intelligence. She also cited 鈥渆xciting junior faculty鈥 like Associate Professor Raquel Urtasun, who is also leading Uber鈥檚 self-driving research lab in Toronto.
In addition to U of T鈥檚 machine learning expertise, the ability to work with 鈥渨orld-class clinical collaborators鈥 at U of T鈥檚 partner hospitals was another important draw for Ghassemi.
鈥淎ll of the people I met at the Faculty of Medicine were excited to work on clinically meaningful problems,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey really wanted to understand how we could apply machine learning techniques and develop new algorithms to be useful in a clinical setting.
鈥淭hat combination of a fantastic technical school and a collaborative, world-class clinical environment is pretty rare.鈥
Ghassemi was named in the "visionaries" category of MIT Technology Review's Under 35 list. For over a decade, the magazine has recognized a list of talented technologists whose work has potential to transform the world.
With files from Jennifer Robinson