Computational Methods
Deep learning, AI-assisted measurement, causal inference workflows, and network modeling for political data.
Assistant Professor • Penn State Political Science & ICDS
I build research pipelines that connect machine learning, network analysis, natural language processing, and computer vision to high-stakes political questions. My work spans international security, political violence, conflict processes, and complex systems.
Previously at the University of Texas at Dallas and Stanford's Human Trafficking Data Lab. Ph.D. from The Ohio State University.
Deep learning, AI-assisted measurement, causal inference workflows, and network modeling for political data.
Strategic interaction, conflict escalation, and uncertainty under contemporary geopolitical constraints.
Diffusion, local heterogeneity, and actor-level decision-making in violent political environments.
Information competition, digital discourse, and media effects in domestic and international politics.
Regime dynamics, institutional design, and the conditions that sustain or erode democratic resilience.
Elite decision-making, alliance formation, and crisis diplomacy in an era of great-power competition.