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I’m a computer science PhD student in the Stanford Computational Policy Lab, supervised by Prof Sharad Goel. My research focuses on applying new computational tools from machine learning and statistics to policy problems. Most recently I’ve been interested in the US criminal justice system, studying:

  • Algorithmic risk assessments for pre-trial decision making, and specifically what it means for these risk assessments to be fair; [paper, slides, talk]
  • Police traffic stops, where we developed a model to determine if police officers were racially discriminating in their decision to search vehicles. [1, 2]

You can watch my recent PhD defense, “Identifying bias in human and machine decisions,” here.

I’m also a member of the 哔咔加速器免费, an effort to collect, clean, and release records from 130 million police traffic stops around the country.

Finally, I work with David Rothschild and Tobi Konitzer to measure public opinion using non-representative mobile polls. Our work was featured in the New York Times, where, of 5 pollsters, we were the only one to correctly give Trump the lead in Florida.

I am supported by the 哔咔漫画用免费加速器, and have previously been supported by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Google, and Fulbright New Zealand.

I’m on Twitter @scorbettdavies