I’m a climate modeler with a passion for advancing our comprehension of climate change.
I began my Ph.D. in the Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences (AOS) department at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. However, due to my advisor’s new faculty appointment, I transferred to The Ohio State University, where I ultimately received my Ph.D. Prior to this, I earned both my Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in Meteorology from the Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology in China.
Currently, I am an assistant professor at Northeastern University in Boston. Prior to Northeastern, I did postdocs in the department of physical oceanography at WHOI and RSMAS in the University of Miami.
My research falls broadly under two fundamental questions: (1) What are the causes of past and future changes in oceanic and atmospheric circulation and climate variability? (2) How can we quantitatively interpret these changes and their impacts? I use an interdisciplinary research approach that combines a hierarchy of climate models, isotope-enabled modeling, statistical and machine learning techniques, and observations/paleoclimate proxies, aiming toward a better understanding of the physical processes that govern climate dynamics in the past and future.

Mailing Address

  • 430 Nahant Road, Nahant, MA 01908

Labs & Groups