Cyril Birks
Cyril is a Doctoral Researcher in AI at the DR-NLP CDT. supervised by Neil Bramley. He researches how people and AI imagine what the world could look like and aim at the best outcome when they canβt be certain.
Calliope Vakalopoulou
Calliope investigates the ethical implications of using generative AI chatbots in mental health contexts, focusing on how such technologies challenge traditional notions of care, autonomy, and emotional integrity in therapeutic relationships.
Alexandra Gillespie
Alexβs PhD is exploring the impacts of Digital Immortality Technologies and the possible regulatory or ethical frameworks that could mitigate harm, pulling on considerations in HCI, Digital Ethics, and AI Regulation.
Aulia Ardista Wiradarmo
Aulia is researching how generative AI is reshaping creative processes, values, and virtues, while examining the social and cultural dimensions of co-creating with machines to inform policies on ethical AI in the creative industries of the Global South.
Rayo Verweij
Rayo's PhD research explores participatory constructionist methods for the inclusion of children and young people in the design and development of real-world AI-based tools for schools.
Ambrose Brown
Ambrose is an MLOps specialist studying a PhD at the Universityβs Artificial Intelligence and its Applications Institute. Their work focuses on AI Ethics and they are currently doing research on explainability and reasoning.
Eilidh Bowman
Eilidhβs research explores the ethical dimensions relating to the adoption of companion robots to support ageing-in-place for older adults experiencing feelings of loneliness and social isolation.
Amanda Maria Horzyk
Amanda Horzyk is a PhD candidate in Responsible NLP. Her research bridges legal and technical perspectives in developing leading solutions to complex issues presented by Artificial Intelligence, the Internet and Virtual Reality.
Andrew Linn
Andrew is a third year PhD student with the Usher Institute, researching the implementation and evaluation practices of robotic surgery systems. Andrewβs research draws on his roots in moral theory, and its application to contemporary medical high technology, as well as practice theory empowered by an ethnographic methodology.
Gemma Milne
Gemma is a writer and researcher focused on corporate futurism and the cultural economy of deep tech. She is a PhD researcher at Edinburgh University and a Research Associate at Glasgow University. She is author of 'Smoke & Mirrors: How Hype Obscures the Future and How to See Past It'.
Jacqueline Rowe
Jacquelineβs PhD research explores how to make Natural Language Processing tools and technologies safer, fairer and more equitable for speakers of marginalised languages, drawing on her interdisciplinary background in linguistics, human rights and computer science.
Kimberley Paradis
Kimberley is researching community-based approaches to NLP and exploring how participatory methods can make generative AI safer for Queer people by challenging technocratic structures and centering grassroots knowledge in AI and data governance.
Melody (Zixuan) Wang
Melody has a background in human-computer/robot interaction and product-service system design. Her work focuses on using creative methods and participatory approaches to address open, complex, dynamic, and networked sociotechnical challenges.
Nijesh Upreti
Nijesh investigates the role of causality, abstraction, and creativity in neurosymbolic AI, focusing on building more interpretable, human-centric systems that advance understanding in complex domains.
Srravya Chandhiramowuli
Srravyaβs research examines the work of data annotation for AI, paying particular attention to systemic challenges and frictions, to envision and inform just, equitable futures of AI design, policies and practice.
Stella Rhode
Stella is developing models for risk prediction in intensive care using AI and causal inference methods. With a background in philosophy and data science, she is exploring how ethical reasoning can be explicitly embedded in the model development process.
Venus Sharma
Venus examines the political and ethical implications of climate-smart innovations in agrarian south, focusing on questions of persistent inequality and dynamics of human agency through social change.