“A person’s true life is not found in food and clothing, but in art, thought, and love; in the creation and contemplation of beauty; and in a scientific understanding of the world.”

— Bertrand Russell

I’m Chloe Li.

Based in the Bay Area, I graduated from Georgia Tech with a B.S. in Computer Science.

My work and curiosity sit at the intersection of technical systems and human judgment: LLM and agent evaluation, philosophy, music, books, and small projects that help me understand the world a little more clearly.

Moving from China to the U.S. at 14 shaped much of how I see the world. A lot of my life has unfolded between languages, cultures, ways of thinking, and different ideas of what it means to become yourself.

Outside of work, I’m often drawn to philosophy, literature, and music — especially thinkers like Plato, Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche, whose work circles around knowledge, beauty, suffering, meaning, and the strange project of becoming a self.

Computer science became my formal field of study, but philosophy, AI, and music have always pulled at the edges. The questions that stay with me often sit between art, science, and human judgment: how people make meaning, how systems behave, how intelligence is evaluated, and how beautiful or strange things can change the way we think.

Right now, my career is focused on LLM and agent evaluation. Evaluation is one of the highest-leverage parts of AI development — not a final checklist after a model is built, but a central force that shapes what gets trusted, improved, deployed, and understood in the real world.

This site is a public record of what I’m learning, building, and noticing. Some of it is technical. Some of it is personal. Some of it is probably just an attempt to understand why a sentence, a song, a model behavior, or a random Sunday afternoon stayed with me.