Amanda Randles

Amanda Randles is an American computer scientist who is the Alfred Winborne and Victoria Stover Mordecai Associate Professor of Biomedical Sciences at Duke University.

After working for three years as a software developer on the IBM Blue Gene project,[1] she went to Harvard University to earn an S.M.

in computer science (2010) and a PhD in applied physics (2013)[2] advised by Efthimios Kaxiras and Hanspeter Pfister.

[8] In 2023, she was warded the NIH Pioneer award to support her work combining wearables with physics-based models.

[9] She was named to the 2015 World Economic Forum Young Scientist List for her work on the "design of large-scale parallel applications targeting problems in physics".