• I have an undergraduate degree in Mathematics (MMath, 2004–2008) and a doctoral degree in Engineering Science (DPhil, 2010–2015). My thesis, supervised by Antonis Papachristodoulou, won the 2015 European PhD Award on Control for Complex and Heterogeneous Systems, awarded by the European Embedded Control Institute (EECI).

  • Starting in January 2015, I was a postdoc in Engineering Science at the University of Oxford, working with Antonis Papachristodoulou on using feedback control to engineer robustness and reduce uncertainty in synthetic biology.

  • In mid-2016 I left academic work for the civil service, joining the Government Operational Research Service. I enjoyed postings at HMRC and at UK Research and Innovation (which was then part of the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy).

  • In March 2018 I returned to academia. I began a postdoc with Ruth Baker in the Wolfson Centre for Mathematical Biology at the University of Oxford where I worked on Next Generation Approaches to Connect Models and Quantitative Data in Biology. I moved in June 2021 to the Alan Turing Institute where I worked in the AI for Science and Government research programme as part of the Shocks and Resilience project.

  • In June 2022 I once more left academia for a position in Research Engineering at Bentley Systems, working on pedestrian mobility simulation. My current job as a Data Scientist at Datasparq began in September 2023.