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Chengxu Zhuang is an artificial intelligence research scientist at Meta. He is known for his work in natural language processing, computer vision, and computational neuroscience, including contributions to OpenAI's ChatGPT and his current role on Meta's Superintelligence team. [1] [2]
Zhuang attended Tsinghua University from 2011 to 2016, where he earned a Bachelor of Engineering in Electronic Engineering and a second major, a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics. He then pursued his doctoral studies at Stanford University from 2016 to 2022, obtaining a Ph.D. in Psychology under the advisement of Daniel Yamins. Following his Ph.D., Zhuang was an ICoN Postdoctoral Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) from 2022 to 2024, where he worked with researchers Ev Fedorenko and Jacob Andreas. [1] [5]
Zhuang began his post-doctoral career at MIT's EvLab, focusing on the intersection of language and brain sciences. He later joined OpenAI, where he contributed to the development of the ChatGPT Advanced Voice Mode. In 2025, he transitioned to a role as an AI Research Scientist at Meta. He is a member of the company's recently formed "Superintelligence" team, a group assembled to advance research in artificial general intelligence. This team includes numerous researchers and engineers from prominent AI organizations such as OpenAI and Google's DeepMind.
While at Stanford, Zhuang served as a teaching assistant for several courses, including Statistical Methods for Behavioral and Social Sciences, Experimental Methods, Large-Scale Neural Network Models for Neuroscience, and High-Dimensional Methods for Behavioral and Neural Data. [1] [3] [4] [5] [7]
Zhuang's research interests include natural language processing, language acquisition, computer vision, computational neuroscience, and deep learning. His work often explores the connections between biological intelligence and artificial intelligence models.
He has co-authored numerous papers presented at major AI and neuroscience conferences. His publications cover topics such as unsupervised learning from video, the development of neural network models for the ventral visual stream, and the use of visual grounding to improve language modeling. [1] [6]
A list of his major publications is available on his personal website. [1] [6]