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Victoria is a Postdoctoral Associate in
Law and a Kauffman Fellow in Law at the Information Society
Project
at Yale Law School.
After completing my PhD in statistics, I obtained a Master's in Legal Studies in 2007
from Stanford Law School where I created a new licensing structure for computational
research. My paper proposing this Intellectual Property framework, called the
Reproducible Research Standard, won the Kaltura Writing Competition, given in
connection with the Third Conference on Access to Knowledge (A2K3) in 2008.
I completed my PhD in statistics at Stanford University in 2006 with advisor David
Donoho. My thesis evaluated regression techniques for cases where there are many more variables
than observations, addressing a key consequence of the modern data deluge. A component of my dissertation was the creation and release of SparseLab, a collaborative platform for distributing code and data underlying published papers that focus on sparse solutions to
underdetermined
systems of equations. My current research focuses on reproducibility of computational results, and includes understanding factors underlying code and data sharing among
researchers, how pervasive and large-scale computation is changing our practice of the
scientific method, and the role of legal framing for scientific openness and advancement.
I am co-chairing a working group on Communities and Virtual Organizations in the NSF's Office of Cyberinfrastructure Task Force on Grand
Challenge Communities. I am a Science Commons fellow, a member of the Sigma Xi
scientific research society, and the AAAS.
I've previously been a postdoc with Eric von Hippel's Innovation and
Entrepreneurship Group at MIT's Sloan School of Management, and a research fellow at
the Berkman Center at Harvard Law School. I've taught quantitative methods as a Lecturer in Law at
Stanford Law School, as well as statistics and computing at Stanford University, the
University of California at Berkeley, and San Jose State University. I developed an online midquarter evaluation system for
statistics course evaluation (subsequently
adopted by mechanical engineering). For my teaching efforts Stanford has recognized me with the Centennial Teaching Award and the Statistics Departmental Teaching Award
(twice).
I worked as a summer extern at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
with Chief Judge Kozinski and served as Managing Editor of the Stanford Law and
Policy Review in 2007. I've been a summer intern at PARC.com (formerly Xerox
PARC) and IBM's T. J. Watson Research Labs.
I obtained Master's and Bachelor's degrees in Economics from the University
of British Columbia and the University of Ottawa respectively, where I was a member of the Dean's List for Academic Excellence and scholarship recipient. My
webpage, including
talks and publications, is http://www.stodden.net and I occasionally blog at http://blog.stodden.net.
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I can be reached at the statistics department
address:
Department of Statistics
Stanford University
390 Serra Mall Stanford, CA
94305-4065
or via email: vcs AT stanford DOT edu.
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