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<!doctype html>
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<script src="https://use.fontawesome.com/baff6f55f5.js"></script>
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<title>Junjie Wu</title>
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<header>
<h1>Junjie Wu</h1>
<p>Ph.D. candidate at HKUST</p>
<h3><p class="view"><a href="https://wujunjie1998.github.io/">Home</a></p></h3>
<h3><p class="view"><a href="https://wujunjie1998.github.io/publication1.html">Publication</a></p></h3>
<h3><p class="view"><a href="https://wujunjie1998.github.io/experience.html">Experience</a></p></h3>
<h3><p class="view"><a href="https://wujunjie1998.github.io/personal.html">Personal</a></p></h3>
<h3><p class="view"><a href="Junjie_Wu_s_CV.pdf">CV</a></p></h3>
<p class="view"><b>Social</b><br>
<a href="mailto:junjie.wu@connect.ust.hk" class="author-social" target="_blank"><i class="fa fa-fw fa-envelope-square"></i> Email</a><br>
<a href="https://scholar.google.com.hk/citations?hl=zh-CN&pli=1&user=BuV0LxwAAAAJ" class="author-social" target="_blank"><i class="fa fa-fw fa-envelope-square"></i> Google Scholar</a><br>
<a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/junjie-wu-875764180/" class="author-social" target="_blank"><i class="fa fa-fw fa-envelope-square"></i> Linkedin</a><br>
<p><b>Contact:</b><br>junjie.wu@connect.ust.hk</p>
</header>
<section>
<h2><a id="published-papers-updated" class="anchor" href="#publications" aria-hidden="true"><span class="octicon octicon-link"></span></a>Education</h2>
<p style="margin:0;" }><p > <b>Ph.D. candidate, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology</b>
<br> Sep 2020 ~ Present
<i><br>Advisor:<a href="https://sites.google.com/view/dyyeung/home"> Prof. Dit-Yan Yeung</a> <br></i>
</button>
</p>
<div class="panel" style="background-color: #F1F1F1; color: #666; padding: 10px;"> We examine the extent to which participation in high school athletics has beneficial effects on future education, labor market, and health outcomes. Due to the absence of plausible instruments in observational data, we use recently developed methods that relate selection on observables with selection on unobservables to estimate bounds on the causal effect of athletics participation. We analyze these effects in the US separately for men and women using three different nationally representative longitudinal data sets that each link high school athletics participation with later-life outcomes. We do not find consistent evidence of individual benefits reported in many previous studies—once we have accounted for selection, high school athletes are no more likely to attend college, earn higher wages, or participate in the labor force. However, we do find that men (but not women) who participated in high school athletics are more likely to exercise regularly as adults. Nevertheless, athletes are no less likely to be obese. </div></p>
<p style="margin:0;" }><p > <b>B.S. of Statistics, Sun Yat-sen University</b>
<br> Sep 2016 ~ June 2020
<i><br>Overall GPA: 3.8/4.0<br></i>
</button>
</p>
<div class="panel" style="background-color: #F1F1F1; color: #666; padding: 10px;"> We examine the extent to which participation in high school athletics has beneficial effects on future education, labor market, and health outcomes. Due to the absence of plausible instruments in observational data, we use recently developed methods that relate selection on observables with selection on unobservables to estimate bounds on the causal effect of athletics participation. We analyze these effects in the US separately for men and women using three different nationally representative longitudinal data sets that each link high school athletics participation with later-life outcomes. We do not find consistent evidence of individual benefits reported in many previous studies—once we have accounted for selection, high school athletes are no more likely to attend college, earn higher wages, or participate in the labor force. However, we do find that men (but not women) who participated in high school athletics are more likely to exercise regularly as adults. Nevertheless, athletes are no less likely to be obese. </div></p>
<h2><a id="published-papers-updated" class="anchor" href="#publications" aria-hidden="true"><span class="octicon octicon-link"></span></a>Internship</h2>
<p style="margin:0;" }><p > <b>Yale University, New Haven</b>
<br> Sep 2024 ~ Present
<i><br><a href="https://yale-nlp.github.io/">Yale NLP</a>, advised by <a href="https://armancohan.com/">Arman Cohan</a> <br></i>
</button>
</p>
<div class="panel" style="background-color: #F1F1F1; color: #666; padding: 10px;"> We examine the extent to which participation in high school athletics has beneficial effects on future education, labor market, and health outcomes. Due to the absence of plausible instruments in observational data, we use recently developed methods that relate selection on observables with selection on unobservables to estimate bounds on the causal effect of athletics participation. We analyze these effects in the US separately for men and women using three different nationally representative longitudinal data sets that each link high school athletics participation with later-life outcomes. We do not find consistent evidence of individual benefits reported in many previous studies—once we have accounted for selection, high school athletes are no more likely to attend college, earn higher wages, or participate in the labor force. However, we do find that men (but not women) who participated in high school athletics are more likely to exercise regularly as adults. Nevertheless, athletes are no less likely to be obese. </div></p>
<p style="margin:0;" }><p > <b>Pattern Recognition Center, WeChat AI, Tencent</b>
<br> May 2024 ~ Present
<i><br> Advised by <a href="https://sites.google.com/site/moyunlp/mo-yu?authuser=0">Mo Yu</a>, <a href="https://lemaoliu.github.io/homepage/">Lemao Liu</a> <br></i>
</button>
</p>
<div class="panel" style="background-color: #F1F1F1; color: #666; padding: 10px;"> We examine the extent to which participation in high school athletics has beneficial effects on future education, labor market, and health outcomes. Due to the absence of plausible instruments in observational data, we use recently developed methods that relate selection on observables with selection on unobservables to estimate bounds on the causal effect of athletics participation. We analyze these effects in the US separately for men and women using three different nationally representative longitudinal data sets that each link high school athletics participation with later-life outcomes. We do not find consistent evidence of individual benefits reported in many previous studies—once we have accounted for selection, high school athletes are no more likely to attend college, earn higher wages, or participate in the labor force. However, we do find that men (but not women) who participated in high school athletics are more likely to exercise regularly as adults. Nevertheless, athletes are no less likely to be obese. </div></p>
<p style="margin:0;" }><p > <b>Tencent AI Lab</b>
<br> Jun 2021 ~ Jan 2024
<i><br><a href="https://ai.tencent.com/ailab/nlp/en/index.html">NLP Group</a>, advised by <a href="https://lemaoliu.github.io/homepage/">Lemao Liu</a>, <a href="https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=aSJcgQMAAAAJ&hl=zh-CN">Wei Bi</a> <br></i>
</button>
</p>
<div class="panel" style="background-color: #F1F1F1; color: #666; padding: 10px;"> We examine the extent to which participation in high school athletics has beneficial effects on future education, labor market, and health outcomes. Due to the absence of plausible instruments in observational data, we use recently developed methods that relate selection on observables with selection on unobservables to estimate bounds on the causal effect of athletics participation. We analyze these effects in the US separately for men and women using three different nationally representative longitudinal data sets that each link high school athletics participation with later-life outcomes. We do not find consistent evidence of individual benefits reported in many previous studies—once we have accounted for selection, high school athletes are no more likely to attend college, earn higher wages, or participate in the labor force. However, we do find that men (but not women) who participated in high school athletics are more likely to exercise regularly as adults. Nevertheless, athletes are no less likely to be obese. </div></p>
<p style="margin:0;" }><p > <b>Tsinghua University, Beijing</b>
<br> Oct 2019 ~ Aug 2020
<i><br><a href="http://coai.cs.tsinghua.edu.cn/">CoAI Lab</a>, advised by <a href="http://coai.cs.tsinghua.edu.cn/hml/">Minlie Huang</a> <br></i>
</button>
</p>
<div class="panel" style="background-color: #F1F1F1; color: #666; padding: 10px;"> We examine the extent to which participation in high school athletics has beneficial effects on future education, labor market, and health outcomes. Due to the absence of plausible instruments in observational data, we use recently developed methods that relate selection on observables with selection on unobservables to estimate bounds on the causal effect of athletics participation. We analyze these effects in the US separately for men and women using three different nationally representative longitudinal data sets that each link high school athletics participation with later-life outcomes. We do not find consistent evidence of individual benefits reported in many previous studies—once we have accounted for selection, high school athletes are no more likely to attend college, earn higher wages, or participate in the labor force. However, we do find that men (but not women) who participated in high school athletics are more likely to exercise regularly as adults. Nevertheless, athletes are no less likely to be obese. </div></p>
<p style="margin:0;" }><p > <b>University of Michigan, Ann Arbor</b>
<br> Jul 2019 ~ June 2020
<i><br><a href="https://blablablab.si.umich.edu">Blablablab</a>, advised by <a href="http://jurgens.people.si.umich.edu">David Jurgens</a> <br></i>
</button>
</p>
<div class="panel" style="background-color: #F1F1F1; color: #666; padding: 10px;"> We examine the extent to which participation in high school athletics has beneficial effects on future education, labor market, and health outcomes. Due to the absence of plausible instruments in observational data, we use recently developed methods that relate selection on observables with selection on unobservables to estimate bounds on the causal effect of athletics participation. We analyze these effects in the US separately for men and women using three different nationally representative longitudinal data sets that each link high school athletics participation with later-life outcomes. We do not find consistent evidence of individual benefits reported in many previous studies—once we have accounted for selection, high school athletes are no more likely to attend college, earn higher wages, or participate in the labor force. However, we do find that men (but not women) who participated in high school athletics are more likely to exercise regularly as adults. Nevertheless, athletes are no less likely to be obese. </div></p>
<p style="margin:0;" }><p > <b>Tsinghua University, Beijing</b>
<br> Jul 2018 ~ Sep 2018, Jan 2019 ~ May 2019
<i><br><a href="http://ngnlab.cn/#indexCard">NGN Lab</a>, advised by <a href="http://ngnlab.cn/members/yongfeng-huang.html">Yongfeng Huang</a> <br></i>
</button>
</p>
<div class="panel" style="background-color: #F1F1F1; color: #666; padding: 10px;"> We examine the extent to which participation in high school athletics has beneficial effects on future education, labor market, and health outcomes. Due to the absence of plausible instruments in observational data, we use recently developed methods that relate selection on observables with selection on unobservables to estimate bounds on the causal effect of athletics participation. We analyze these effects in the US separately for men and women using three different nationally representative longitudinal data sets that each link high school athletics participation with later-life outcomes. We do not find consistent evidence of individual benefits reported in many previous studies—once we have accounted for selection, high school athletes are no more likely to attend college, earn higher wages, or participate in the labor force. However, we do find that men (but not women) who participated in high school athletics are more likely to exercise regularly as adults. Nevertheless, athletes are no less likely to be obese. </div></p>
<h2><a id="published-papers-updated" class="anchor" href="#publications" aria-hidden="true"><span class="octicon octicon-link"></span></a>Service</h2>
<p style="margin:0;" }><p > <b>Conference PC</b>
<br> ACL 2023
<p style="margin:0;" }><p > <b>Reviewer</b>
<br> ACL 2022/2023/2024, EMNLP 2022/2023/2024, NAACL 2024, NeurIPS 2024, NLPCC 2024, ICLR 2025, ACL Rolling Review
</button>
</p>
<div class="panel" style="background-color: #F1F1F1; color: #666; padding: 10px;"> We examine the extent to which participation in high school athletics has beneficial effects on future education, labor market, and health outcomes. Due to the absence of plausible instruments in observational data, we use recently developed methods that relate selection on observables with selection on unobservables to estimate bounds on the causal effect of athletics participation. We analyze these effects in the US separately for men and women using three different nationally representative longitudinal data sets that each link high school athletics participation with later-life outcomes. We do not find consistent evidence of individual benefits reported in many previous studies—once we have accounted for selection, high school athletes are no more likely to attend college, earn higher wages, or participate in the labor force. However, we do find that men (but not women) who participated in high school athletics are more likely to exercise regularly as adults. Nevertheless, athletes are no less likely to be obese. </div></p>
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