The Team
Collaborators
Ryan Mayfield | Entrepreneur in Residence, LiveSafe Strategy
Ryan is the Director of Strategy & Vision at LiveSafe, enabling individuals to look out for their communities and build resilience with crowdsourced risk. He cares about: user analysis, core value propositions, misinformation, and international security. Previously, Ryan developed models for political risk and impact investing with a data science startup, and helped build the Hacking for Defense platform at BMNT Partners to solve national security problems at speed. He was inspired to rethink approaches to safety and security through research with the Empirical Studies of Conflict (ESOC) Project and the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC), where he studied how insurgencies use minimum viable products and lean iteration to stay ahead of government forces. A graduate of Stanford University (Political Science & International Security), Ryan is originally from Vancouver, WA and now lives in East Palo Alto, CA with his wife, Aly.
Michael R. Hanneken | Sr. Fellow, Peace Innovation Lab
At the Peace Innovation Lab since 2016, Michael Hanneken has focused on collaborations between the private sector, government and non-government organizations. He was a battalion commander and former member of the joint staff at US Special Operations Command. At the Global Project Center, Michael developed a flexible framework to assist leaders in navigating international policy dilemmas in conflict-affect economies. He has been a reoccurring speaker at the MORS Emerging Technique Forum in Washington DC and at the Naval Postgraduate School on bridging qualitative and quantitative research methodologies.
He holds a PhD in engineering from Stanford University, completed postgraduate studies in commercial development from Harvard University, and is a former president of the Certified Commercial Investment Members, San Francisco chapter. Prior to coming to Stanford, Michael founded an advisory firm that supports executives and boards on prominent, multibillion-dollar, capital projects for public authorities CalPERS and CaHSRA, and private corporations such as Plantronics and L3 Communications.
Saurabh Mishra | Fellow, Peace Innovation Lab, Researcher AI Index Program Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence
Saurabh Mishra is a researcher and the manager of the AI Index Program at Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI). The AI Index grounds the public narrative on AI using a data-driven approach.His research is at the intersection of AI, economics, and decision-making. He is leading pioneering projects using AI for reliable forecasting of international capital markets to inform trading strategies and risk management to aid executive decision-making for private and public investment. His current research interests include cognition and psychology of how executives interact with AI systems to make decisions and reach sustainable outcomes.Before joining Stanford, Mishra served as an economist at the World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF), and International Finance Corporation (IFC). Mishra has consulted for diverse international institutions including Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), World Trade Organization (WTO), and advises startups and funds.Among his contributions, he pioneered research on the role of hi-tech service sector in economic diversification, structural transformation economic growth and development. His research has been cited by several leading media including The Financial Times, The Economist, Bloomberg, Live Mint.He holds a BA in Economics, MS in Applied Economics and Finance from the University of California Santa Cruz, and PhD in Reliability Engineering from the University of Maryland College Park.
Ted Wallach | Visiting Scholar
Ted Wallach cut his teeth under Martin Scorsese. Directing and producing for over a decade in Bollywood, Hollywood, the Middle East, and Europe, his last film, Misdirection (narrated & produced by Common; on iTunes) in which kids escape the ghetto by becoming magicians, led to his creating a performance of a Blood-turned-magician for Google’s Peace Summit, where eighty “formers” (Neo-Nazis, gang members, terrorists) met to end the radicalization of youth.
As the original Creative Director of WeWork, Ted created campaigns from ending oil subsidies in America to building wells in Africa with Charity Water. After four years at different marketing agencies in NYC, he created The AMEX Trifecta of Upward Mobility with the Small Business Saturday team.
He became CSO then CEO of TimeRepublik a global digital time bank and returned to THNK: School for Creative Leaders where he did his post-graduate work to serve as an expert in residence supporting fledgling ventures with digital alternative currency strategies.
Ted now has a clinical practice in which he coaches individuals using a combination of Taoism and Quantum Mechanics to support feeling management, overcoming obstacles and manifesting that which they are trying to build in their lives.
He has become especially interested in the effect masculinity has on both men and women and has started Quantum Warrior an online men’s circle with his partner Eric Shanks. Together they are launching a podcast about masculinity with the Peace Innovation Lab at Stanford where Ted is currently a visiting scholar.
Amy Robyn Krystosik, MPH, PhD | Post-Doctoral Scholar, Stanford School of Medicine
I am a post-doctoral scholar in the LaBeaud Laboratory at Stanford School of Medicine studying arboviral epidemiology. I am interested in community health, social justice, and spatial analysis. I have recently finished my PhD in public health epidemiology from Kent State University College of Public Health focusing on chikungunya, Zika, and dengue in Cali, Colombia. Previously I worked on vector control with attractive toxic sugar baiting experiments and dengue and Chagas’ disease surveillance and control. I also advocated human rights for the prevention of domestic violence and HIV. I studied international health and development at Tulane University School of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene and Biochemistry at John Carroll University.
Annie Gentes | Graduate School of Engineering Telecom ParisTech, Paris
Annie Gentes is a professor in information and communication sciences in Telecom ParisTech, a graduate school of engineering in Paris, and head of the co-design and media studies lab. Her research focuses on creative practices in art, design and engineering. She is involved in multiple projects on IT design for mobility, culture, learning, and games. She explores 3D interfaces and virtual intelligent agents as well as new network infrastructures (in particular distributed architectures) and augmented reality technologies.
Rosanna Guadagno | Social Psychologist, Researcher
Dr. Rosanna Guadagno is a Researcher with the Peace Innovation Lab at Stanford University. She received her Ph.D. in Social Psychology from Arizona State University and completed her postdoctoral work at the Research Center for Virtual Environments and Behavior at the University of California at Santa Barbara. She has previously been on the faculties of the University of Alabama and the University of Texas at Dallas, and has been visiting faculty at the University of California at Berkeley. Dr. Guadagno also previously served as a Program Director at the National Science Foundation managing three programs: Social Psychology; the Science of Learning Centers; and Secure and Trustworthy Cyberspace (SaTC). Her research interests focus on the confluence of three main areas: Social Influence and Persuasion, Mediated-Communication, and Gender Roles. Her work has been published in journals such as: Perspectives on Psychological Science, Psychological Inquiry, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Computers in Human Behavior, Media Psychology, CyberPsychology, Behavior, & Social Networking, and Sex Roles; covered in the press by: CBS News, The New York Times, The Atlantic Monthly, The New Yorker, The Associated Press, ESPN, The New Scientist, MSNBC, and Alabama Public Radio. Dr. Guadagno is an expert blogger for Psychology Today, is on the editorial board for the journals Basic and Applied Social Psychology and Psychology of Popular Media Culture, and is the Editor of the International Journal of Interactive Communication Systems and Technologies. Her work is supported by the National Science Foundation.
Paul Iske | University Maastricht, Netherlands
Paul Iske is professor at the School of Business and Economics, University Maastricht, Netherlands, focusing on Open Innovation and Business Venturing. Special topic: Combinatoric Innovation (Innovation by Combination). He is on the Board of the Network of Social Innovation.Paul founded the ‘Institute of Brilliant Failures’, with the mission to highlight the importance of experimentation to achieve paradigm shifts and breakthrough innovation. Furthermore, Paul is founder and president of the Institute for Serious Optimism (www.iiso.eu), aiming to establish the relationship between positive energy on the one hand and impact (business, social, sport, education, etc.) on the other.Paul Iske is one of the founding partners of the Institute for Next Generation Value Creation, that aims to discover new ways for a sustainable future, focusing on South Korea. He is also co-founder and Chairman of the Dutch-Norwegian Business Network.Paul acts as a board-room consultant on issues related to innovation, creativity and entrepreneurship. As ‘Consulting Challenger’ he invites his clients to make the extra step and to look beyond the obvious. He is a frequent speaker on international conferences and workshops focusing on Innovation, Creativity, Entrepreneurship and Knowledge Management.Paul started his career with a PhD in Theoretical Physics, followed by various positions at Shell, managing internal and external projects related to development of more sustainable energy production.Paul is a collaborative ambassador of the Peace Innovation Lab since 2015, sharing the mission and the approach, based applying ‘combinatoric innovation’ to make the world a better place for all of us!
Juan Manuel Menazzi | Instituto Tecnológico, Buenos Aires
Juan Manuel Menazzi is a consultant, entrepreneur and university teacher. He studied and worked mainly in economic development & social initiatives and focused on social projects design & execution for European Union, national & regional Goverments & private entities. Juan Manuel is enthusiast about tech & social interaction and exploring new tools for social projects and interventions.Juan Manuel leads the Entrepreneurship Center at Buenos Aires Institute of Technology (ITBA). Juan Manuel studied Philosophy, Social Sciences & Project Management in Buenos Aires, Milano and Barcelona and received DEA (Ph) with a study about Knowledge Sociology.
Timo Nyberg | Senior Research Fellow, Aalto University, Finland
Professor Dr. Timo Nyberg is the head of Software Business Lab and a Senior Research Fellow at Aalto University, Finland. He is also visiting professor at the Cloud Computing Center of Chinese Academy of Sciences and Dongguan University of Technology in China. At Stanford Peace Innovation Lab he collaborates to research and develop REDD, the Rapid Experimentation and Deal Design method, applying peace innovation insights for increasing positive engagement within and between businesses. In this context he is helping to develop models to visualize, measure, and optimize innovation best-practices.Timo has a research history extending from automation and control systems to information and communication technology, innovation, virtual reality, and dynamic value networks. His life-long interest has been in intellectual property rights and inventions. Timo was Head of the Research School, and founder of several corporate PhD programs at Tampere University of Technology in Finland. He is a long-time member of the Finnish Automation Society and has published over 100 scientific writings and articles and several books together with his colleagues. He has over 30 patents. He has received national and international awards for his innovation work.
Göte Nyman | University of Helsinki, Finland
Dr. Göte Nyman is a professor of psychology at the University of Helsinki, Finland. Since 2010 when working with the PIL/EPIC project he has advised Stanford Peace Innovation Lab on a broad research agenda, and helped develop models for measuring and promoting peace and non-violence, with a particular focus on opportunity perception and networking. He is the member of the Finnish Pattern Recognition Society (Hatutus), Finnish Consortium of Artificial Intelligence Society, and Rauhankone (“Peace engine”, founded by professor Timo Honkela). Göte’s research history extends from basic research to human technology, brain, gaming, innovation, psychology of the virtual, and organizational change. His life-long interest has been human vision. Göte was the Dean, Head of Department and founder of the cognitive science program at UH and has published about 200 scientific writings and articles and four books together with his colleagues. He has received national and international awards for his work. At present, he works with e.g. Human-AI relationship topics and is involved in the design of a next-generation, human-centric communication platform. Göte’s blog “gotepoem” is athttp://gotepoem.wordpress.com/ where you can find more about his thoughts and ideas.
Alex Soojung-Kim Pang | Associate Fellow at Oxford University's Saïd Business School
Alex Soojung-Kim Pang is a futurist of science and technology. Alex has conducted a variety of forecast and prototyping exercises exploring the business and social implications of emerging technologies, the future of science, and emerging global innovation networks. His methodological research examines how futurists can use behavioral economics and social software to better understand and build responses to today's complex global challenges. In spring 2011 he was a visiting fellow at Microsoft Research Cambridge, where he developed a framework for contemplative computing, an approach to information technologies that promotes mindfulness and concentration in users. Alex holds a B.A. and Ph.D. in history and sociology of science from the University of Pennsylvania, and postdoctoral fellowships at Stanford University and the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of Empire and the Sun: Victorian Solar Eclipse Expeditions (Stanford University Press, 2002), and numerous articles in scholarly and popular publications.
Gabrielle Wong-Parodi | Carnegie Mellon University
Gabrielle Wong-Parodi is a behavioral scientist who uses the decision science approach to design, develop and evaluate human-centered interventions to improve community resilience and sustainability, in the face of environmental and health threats. She has applied this approach to multiple topics including indoor air quality, preterm birth, energy conservation, energy development, sea level rise, and resiliency. Policies, programs or tools (interventions) to promote effective responses to hazards often make faulty assumptions about human behavior. Decision science offers one method for developing interventions that are behaviorally realistic and respectful of the people for whom they serve. This approach involves analysis (what decisions do people face?), description (how do people deal with those decisions?), and intervention design, development, and evaluation (how can people be helped to make better decisions?).Gabrielle Wong-Parodi, PhD, is an Assistant Research Professor in the Department of Engineering and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon University. Dr. Wong-Parodi is an affiliate at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the Peace and Innovation Lab at Stanford University, and is the social science research liaison for CMU at Skoll Global Threats. Dr. Wong-Parodi holds a B.A. in Psychology and a Ph.D. in Energy and Resources, both from UC Berkeley.
Piero Scaruffi | Cultural Historian
Piero Scaruffi graduated in Mathematics, did research in Theoretical Physics, worked on the Internet before it was called Internet, and managed an Artificial Intelligence Center before deciding that he was better at thinking than at doing. He now calls himself a cultural historian. He has lectured in three continents on Cognitive Science, History of Knowledge, and Innovation. He has written books on a variety of topics: rock and jazz music, consciousness, artificial intelligence, history of science, besides original poetry. Two of his books (“A History of Silicon Valley” and “Intelligence is not Artificial”) have been translated into Chinese. He has lectured extensively in China since 2015. He founded several interdisciplinary happenings in the Bay Area, including the Leonardo Art Science Evenings (LASERs) and the Life Art Science Tech (LAST) festival. His latest book, written directly in Chinese with Jinxia Niu, is titled "Humankind 2.0 - The Technologies of the Future". An avid traveler, Piero had visited more than 160 countries of the world as of 2016.
Patrick Tague | Assistant Research Professor, Carnegie Mellon University
Patrick Tague is an Assistant Research Professor and leader of the Wireless Network & System Security group at Carnegie Mellon University, holding appointments with CyLab, the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, the Information Networking Institute, and the Silicon Valley Campus. His research interests include wireless/mobile communications and networking; wireless/mobile security and privacy; robust and resilient networked systems; and analysis and sense-making of sensor network data. He received PhD and MS degrees in Electrical Engineering from the University of Washington as a member of the Network Security Lab and BS degrees in Mathematics and Computer Engineering from the University of Minnesota. Patrick received the Yang Research Award for outstanding graduate research in the UW Electrical Engineering Department, the Outstanding Graduate Research Award from the UW Center for Information Assurance and Cybersecurity, and the NSF CAREER award.
Dr. Lisa Schirch | Senior Research Fellow, Toda Peace Institute
Dr. Lisa Schirch is Senior Research Fellow for the Toda Peace Institute where she directs the Institute’s “Social Media and Peacebuilding” program to explore the impact of social media technology on conflict dynamics and its potential for improved social cohesion. Schirch is also a a Senior Fellow with the Alliance for Peacebuilding and Visiting Scholar at George Mason University’s School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution. A former Fulbright Fellow in East and West Africa, Schirch is the author of ten books and numerous peer-reviewed chapters and journal articles. In 2018, Schirch published an edited book on The Ecology of Violent Extremism which builds on her previous work to explore tech-assisted dialogue and coordination to improve state-society relationships and social cohesion. She holds a PhD in Conflict Analysis and Resolution from George Mason University and an Honours BA in Political Science and International Relations. In her teaching work as professor of peacebuilding at the graduate program at the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding at Eastern Mennonite University and dozens of other universities around the world, she uses scenario-based, interactive pedagogies to foster innovation, improvisation, and skill-building in negotiation and problem solving.