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G-Research June 2024 Grant Winners

23 July 2024
  • News

Each month, we provide up to £2,000 in grant money to early career researchers in quantitative disciplines.

Our aim is to support and assist PhD students and postdocs conducting research, particularly with costs that may be difficult to get funding for elsewhere, for example, travel for those who are caring for children, or expenses for volunteer work related to research.

Learn more about our grant programme, including how you can apply and the work we support.

Read on to hear from our latest winners, their research and how our grants will aid their work.

June grant winners

Ben Boyd (University of Cambridge)

“I am a PhD student at the University of Cambridge where my research lies at the intersection of astrophysics and machine learning.

“Thanks to G-Research’s generous support I can showcase my work at the International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML) AI for Science workshop in Vienna, where my draft paper has been accepted. I am thrilled with the opportunity to share my work with researchers that are just as passionate as me about applying state-of-the-art machine learning methods to science.”

Yixuan He (University of Oxford)

“I am a final-year PhD student from the Department of Statistics in University of Oxford. My general research interest lies in the field of graph neural networks.

“I am very grateful to receive this G-Research grant which will support my attendance at ICML 2024 in Vienna, where I will present our research on generalization errors in graph neural networks.”

Alicja Ziarko (University of Warsaw and Ideas NCBR)

“I am a PhD student in Machine Learning at the University of Warsaw and Ideas NCBR.

“I’m interested in solving sequential problems using neural networks. This grant from G-Research will enable me to present my latest paper on how to fine-tune pretrained decoder models in order to obtain good quality embedding models at the NGSM workshop at the ICML conference.”

Hunar Batra (University of Oxford)

“I’m a first-year DPhil Computer Science student at the University of Oxford, working on Large Vision Language Models (LVLMs) safety and improved multimodal feature alignment, including adversarial robustness, uncertainty quantification, reasoning and interpretability with the Perceptual Intelligence and Extended Reality Lab under Prof. Ronald Clark.

“This grant from G-Research will allow me to travel to the 41st International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML) in Vienna, Austria, to present my first-author accepted paper, “EVCL: Elastic Variational Continual Learning with Weight Consolidation”, at the Structured Probabilistic Inference & Generative Modelling workshop. This work lays a foundation for developing more robust and reliable AI systems that can continuously learn and adapt in dynamic, real-world continual learning settings, whilst having probabilistic guarantees with the integration of variational posterior approximation and a parameter protection strategy.”

Anastasia Istratuca (University of Edinburgh and Heriot-Watt University)

“My research interests lie at the interface between numerical analysis and statistics. I am working on uncertainty quantification, more specifically, on multilevel Monte Carlo methods with applications in differential equation models with random coefficients.

“The G-Research grant will allow me to attend the Young Applied Mathematicians Conference. This is not only a great opportunity to disseminate my work, but also a platform to promote Piscopia, an international network connecting women and underrepresented genders in Mathematics and related disciplines, and its upcoming conference PiFORUM.”

Kathryn Bowers (University of Cambridge)

“I am a PhD student in Biostatistics, specialising in infectious disease modelling. My current research looks at designing stochastic models to enhance early-stage disease transmission prediction.

“I am delighted to receive this G-Research grant, which will support my research and enable me to collaborate with colleagues at Durham University. This grant not only provides the financial resources necessary for this collaboration but will also contribute to research in pandemic preparedness and response. I am deeply grateful to G-Research for their support.”

Congratulations to all of our grant winners.

Learn more about our monthly grant and how you can apply.

Neuros as one of the biggest and most renowned conferences is of course a great place, uh, to meet researchers, to, uh, network with companies and also to attend the talks and get to know the newest strengths, basically in ml. But for me personally, one main motivation is also paper, which I submitted and where I will be having an oral at, uh, a score based workshop on Friday. And I'm very excited about this research. So I am very excited about the, the workshops because you have like the basically sub communities focusing on specific topics and, uh, you get to know a lot of, uh, interesting researchers. You start collaborations. But I'm also very interested on attending the poster sessions because you get to speak to, uh, people directly to the authors of papers. Basically directly. I would've not been able to attend NIPS without the grant from G Research. So I'm very grateful to g Research for making this happen. And this helps me to present my research here, talk to people, and hopefully start new collaborations, um, which evolve from my previous research. Well, I've spoken to a couple of people from GE research at previous conferences, and I've also been, um, contacted by the recruitment team. Um, I'm already start, I already started the interviewing process. It's a very exciting journey. Um, and I think that they are problem, which they tackle, like predicting the future of the world and the financial markets is very interesting and I think or appreciate their approach of using recent technology in ML to tackle this problem.
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