The Turing appoints 36 UCL researchers as Fellows for 2021/22
30 September 2021
UCL has welcomed the Alan Turing Institute's appointment of 36 UCL researchers among a cohort of more than 400 Fellows for the current academic year. The fellowships start on 1 October and last for 12 months.
The announcement follows a call earlier this year by the Turing for new Fellows, which are recruited from the institute's 13 university partners.
UCL's new Turing Fellows come from 20 different parts of the university and include 18 individuals who have become Fellows for the first time. The new Fellows are:
Bani Anvari
David Atkinson
David Barber
Chris Barnes
Alexandros Beskos
Tao Cheng
Toby Davies
Aureo de Paula
Petros Dellaportas
Steven Gray
Benjamin Guedj
Serge Guillas
Lasana Harris
Matt Kusner
Stephen Law
Nicholas Lesica
Bradley Love
Manolis Mavrikis
Jason McEwan
Hao Ni
Neave O'Clery
Aidan O'Sullivan
Brooks Paige
Miguel Rodrigues
Ricardo Silva
Melanie Smallman
Maarten Speekenbrink
Jack Stilgoe
Laura Toni
Ingo Waldmann
Daniel Wilhelm
Honghan Wu
Helge Wurdemann
Jinghao Xue
Emine Yilmaz
Chen Zhong
Three further appointments were made this year by the Turing with Michael Batty and Christina Pagel named as Fellows and James Hetherington becoming a Honorary Fellow.
Mirco Musolesi continues in his role as the Turing University Lead and retains his Fellowship, while Rosie Niven remains University Liaison Manager and the main administrative point of contact.
Turing Fellowships are not the only way that researchers can work with the Alan Turing Institute. The Turing website and mailing list regularly features research opportunities and the Get Involved page on this website also shares activities open to UCL researchers.
Anyone interested in receiving alerts about opportunities relevent to them can complete a communications questionnaire to be added to a targetted mailing list.