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".