The Oxford skyline. Image credit: University of Oxford Images / John Cairns Photography
The Oxford skyline. Image credit: University of Oxford Images / John Cairns Photography

Three Oxford researchers awarded Future Leaders Fellowships

UKRI has announced its latest round of Future Leaders Fellowships, including three Oxford recipients.

Oxford researchers were among 68 of the most promising research leaders who will be funded £104 million to lead research into global issues and to commercialise their innovations in the UK.

UKRI’s flagship Future Leaders Fellowships (FLF) are designed to enable universities and businesses to develop their most talented early career researchers and innovators and to attract new people to their organisations, including from overseas.

The Oxford recipients are Dr Luc Rocher (Oxford Internet Institute), Professor Dennis Timo Egger (Department of Economics) and Professor Balint Koczor (Mathematical Institute).

Dr Luc Rocher is a lecturer at the Oxford Internet Institute, working at the interface of computer and social sciences, and is a fellow at Kellogg College . Prior to joining Oxford in 2021, they were a researcher at Imperial College London and MIT Media Lab, and studied at ENS de Lyon and UCLouvain.

Dr Rocher is working to improve how we research, access, and use sensitive human data. To address privacy threats, researchers and regulators have advocated for use of modern privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs) such as synthetic data or differential privacy. Dr Rocher’s team aims to make these technologies more transparent and accountable.

Dr Rocher says: ‘Injecting noise into data or creating 'synthetic' datasets can fundamentally distort data in unknown but potentially harmful ways, for example if rare diseases are suppressed from synthetic data, or vulnerable communities are further marginalised.

‘We need strong public data infrastructure to protect human rights while maximising the untapped potential of NHS health data, platform data, and administrative data for independent researchers worldwide.’

The fellowship will advance an evidence-based science of privacy engineering to make research using digital traces safe and reliable; support data-driven policy interventions that rely on personal data; and inform the regulation of underlying AI technologies such as generative AI for synthetic data.

Dennis Timo Egger is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Oxford and a Tutorial Fellow at The Queen's College, Oxford.

He is a development economist interested in labour and trade, using large scale experiments and administrative data sets to conduct empirical research on migration, networks, and spatial linkages between economic agents in general equilibrium. His current work focuses on Kenya, Malawi, Ethiopia, China and Switzerland.

Balint Koczor is Associate Professor in Quantum Information Theory at the Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford.

His research includes quantum theory and in theory of (near-term) quantum computers, with a view to making quantum computers practical. This includes developing new and improved ways to deal with errors (error mitigation techniques) in quantum computers while his research also aims to exploit classical supercomputers to squeeze out as much performance from quantum computers as possible. He works with experimentalists and with quantum companies to develop optimised platforms to best tailor quantum applications to hardware.

In addition to the current awards, Tammy Tong, a Senior Nutritional Epidemiologist at Oxford Population Health, was awarded a fellowship for round 7 of the FLF scheme in November 2023.

Her research programme will assess how dietary proteins and associated indicators, including circulating proteins found in the blood, may influence the development of common age-related diseases such as different subtypes of stroke, hip fractures and vascular dementia. Understanding the relationships between both dietary and blood proteins and these diseases may help to identify future prevention and treatment strategies.

UKRI Chief Executive, Professor Dame Ottoline Leyser, said: ‘UKRI’s Future Leaders Fellowships provide researchers and innovators with long-term support and training to develop ambitious, transformative ideas.

‘The programme supports the research and innovation leaders of the future to transcend disciplinary and sector boundaries, bridging the gap between academia and business.

‘The fellows announced today demonstrate how these awards continue to drive excellence, and to shorten the distance from discovery to prosperity and public good.’