Research
Oxford University is world-famous for research excellence. Our core commitment is to maintain originality, significance and rigour in research within a framework of the highest standards of infrastructure, training, and integrity.
Search below for a range of research stories by department or topic. These stories include impact case studies, videos, news and the research in conversation series. For more information please see individual department websites.
A million-dollar baby?
News
According to an analysis of US Census data, women working in educational sectors (teachers, educators and librarians) target, and give birth, in the spring and summer.
The pull of the UK for EU migrants
News
Three crisis-hit Eurozone countries rank alongside eastern European accession countries as the EU member states whose UK-resident populations have grown the most between 2011 and 2015, the new commentary shows.
'Parents know best about effects of video games on children'
News
The research by the University of Oxford and Cardiff University looks at how the actual experience of playing video games may affect people’s attitudes on their benefits and potential harm.
Biomarker discovery offers hope for new TB vaccine
News
Effect of national minimum wage 'similar to prescribing antidepressants'
News
Through statistically modelling, researchers found a significant improvement in the overall level of mental health in those receiving the national minimum wage equivalent to the effect of taking antidepressants.
Oxford named among most innovative cities in Europe
News
Fresh fruit associated with lower risk of heart attack and stroke
News
The balance of the mind
Oxford Science Blog
If you're seeking to understand mental ill health, it helps to understand mental health first. This is particularly true of neuropsychiatric conditions – when problems with the structure or function of the brain underlie diagnosis.
Renewables and nuclear no substitute for carbon dioxide disposal, argues leading climate physicist
News
Professor Allen, Professor of Geosystem Science in Oxford's School of Geography and the Environment and Department of Physics, argues that there are only two things we can affect with policies today that will really matter for peak warming: reducing the cost of large-scale capture and disposal of
Public missing out on a night’s worth of sleep every week
News
Dr Michael Plant
How to live a happy life
What practical tips would you offer for how to live a happy life?
Going green with the commercial lease
News
Scientists create first light-activated synthetic tissues
News
Barclays Helps to Scale-Up the UK: Growing Businesses, Growing Our Economy
Video
Barclays is launching a new report on the future of business scale-ups in the UK. It is part of a long-standing project partnership built with the business schools of both the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge.
Novel collagen fingerprinting identifies a Neanderthal bone among 2,000 fragments
News
All the tiny pieces of bone were recovered from a key archaeological site, Denisova Cave in Russia, with the remaining fragments found to be from animal species like mammoths, woolly rhino, wolf and reindeer.
Poetry experts mark World Poetry Day
Oxford Arts Blog
Today poetry fans around the world are celebrating World Poetry Day.
To mark the day, we asked poetry experts from our English Faculty and Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages about their own research into poetry, and what poems they recommend we should read today.
Pension cuts have 'significant link' with death rates among older pensioners
News
In England, total spending on Pension Credits (income support payments for low-income pensioners) reduced by 6.5% in 2012. The research investigates why deaths rates for older pensioners, which had been in decline, began to rise again after 2010 and whether this trend was linked to budget cuts.
If you want to quit smoking, do it now
News
Decades of educational expansion 'had little effect on social mobility'
News
He will show that more advantaged families now use their economic, cultural, and social edge to ensure their children stay at the top of the social class ladder.
Health and safety in Tudor England
Oxford Arts Blog
Death is not a laughing matter. But an ongoing study into coroners’ reports into accidental deaths in Tudor England has turned up some deaths which do sound like something out of a slapstick comedy routine.
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