Fellowship focus: Exploring how mathematical modelling can be used to improve acoustic simulation of enclosed spaces.
Professor Schlecht will bring his expertise in digital signal processing and acoustic modelling to tackle the challenge of creating seamless, immersive audio experiences – such as Zoom meetings which feel as natural as if you were present. Part of the EPSRC Scalable Room Acoustics Modelling (SCReAM) project, the Fellowship will explore how mathematical tools can be leveraged to create perceptually convincing models that integrate richer details of reverberation in an efficient manner.
Fellowship focus: Reassessing the impact of Eastern philosophy on Victorian narratives of vivisection and vegetarianism focusing on Thomas Hardy and Edward Carpenter.
In the wake of recent events and Black Lives Matter activism, academics are reassessing the influence of non-western narratives in Victorian culture. Hosted by Professor Pulham, who leads Surrey’s Victoriographies research group, Dr Ghosh’s Fellowship will consider and promote the important part played by Eastern philosophy in discourses on animal welfare and vegetarianism that emerged at the Victorian fin-de-siècle, with special reference to two important figures: author Thomas Hardy and social reformer Edward Carpenter.
Fellowship focus: Applying the concept of ‘narrative non-fiction’ – a synthesis between the literary narrative and the rigorous pursuit of evidence-based knowledge – to history and social sciences, focusing on work conducted in the School of Literature and Languages’ Mobilities Research Centre.
Professor Jablonka has pioneered the concept of ‘creation in history and social sciences’, based on an innovative synthesis between the literary narrative and the rigorous pursuit of evidence-based knowledge – two domains often thought to be incompatible. During the Fellowship, he and Dr Bantman will apply this approach to work conducted in the School of Literature and Languages’ Mobilities Research Centre. The outcomes will include a jointly written article for a leading journal and two talks for specialist and non-academic audiences.
Fellowship focus: Combining research into head and neck cancer in India with expertise in medical imaging to investigate the stability of radiomics biomarkers.
This Fellowship will bring together Dr Thomas’s research into imaging of head and neck cancer (HNC) in India with expertise within Professor Evans’ group in CVSSP working in the field of radiomics (a quantitative approach to medical imaging) with AI and Big Data applications.
During her visit, Dr Thomas will investigate the stability of radiomics biomarkers to variations in image scanning and explore how the two groups can analyse the effects of differences in the tumour characteristics seen in India and the UK. She will also meet and establish links with the National Physical Laboratory’s Metrology for Medical Physics and Data Sciences groups and Royal Surrey Hospital’s Medical Physics and Nuclear Medicine Departments. Hannah’s collaboration with CVSSP is closely allied to Surrey’s newly-established AI Institute.
Fellowship focus: Bringing world-renowned expertise in Hellenistic philosophy and its influence on Roman law to Surrey’s Centre for Law and Philosophy.
A world expert in Hellenistic philosophy and its influence on Roman law, Dr Brouwer’s Fellowship will boost research within the Surrey Centre for Law and Philosophy. During two visits in November 2022 and May 2023, he will present his highly acclaimed recent book on law and philosophy in the late Roman republic and deliver two seminars, helping Surrey to consolidate its position as a key junction between legal philosophical research and the study of the history of law.
Fellowship focus: Reducing assaults in Night-time Entertainment Districts through violence prevention and psychological treatments for people with drug and alcohol disorders.
A specialist in violence prevention in Night-time Entertainment Districts (NEDs), Professor Devilly will work with Dr Patton’s psychological interventions group to set up a collaborative research team focused on violence prevention and psychological treatment. Adapting Professor Devilly’s approach to a UK context, the team will liaise with the police, emergency services and support agencies with the ultimate aim of reducing assaults in NEDs and developing interventions for people who preload with drugs and alcohol.
Fellowship focus: Investigating how the timing of eating could relate to obesity and metabolic disorders and providing insights into dietary guidelines based on this research.
Understanding how the timing of food relates to increased risk of obesity and metabolic disorders is a hot topic which could lead to useful interventions such as time-restricted eating. Visiting Surrey in August 2022, Professor Crispim will collaborate with Professor Skene to characterise time-related dietary patterns in a large sample of Brazilian adults in relation to obesity. The aims of the Fellowship include the assessment for the first time of the temporal pattern of food intake of the Brazilian population and a presentation at the 26th Congress of European Sleep Research Society.
Fellowship focus: Revisiting 19th century Austro-German music, its implications and continuing relevance – taking Johannes Brahms as a case study – through performances, discussions and workshops.
This Fellowship revisits 19th century Austro-German music – taking Johannes Brahms as a case study – acknowledging its implication in some of history’s darkest chapters, justifying its current relevance, and resisting its annexation by an ascendant far right. During three visits to Surrey, Dr Scott will bring a performative dimension to Surrey’s Institute of Austrian and German Music Research with a series of lectures, performances, discussions and workshops, including a public symposium featuring both performances and presentations.
Fellowship focus: Addressing the acute air quality problem in Indian megacities such as Delhi by identifying modelling tools which understand ‘air shed’ from outside city boundaries.
In Delhi – the most polluted city in the world – there is an urgent need to address the acute air quality problem with an ‘air shed’ approach which takes into account air pollutants from outside the city boundaries. Dr Khan, a Senior Environmental Engineer within Delhi’s government, will collaborate with Professor Kumar to identify the best modelling tools to help understand atmospheric transport of pollution and its dispersion, and to develop air shed delineation protocols, creating a model for other Indian megacities.
Fellowship focus: Engaging schools in STEM education through the Heat-Cool project, which teaches children about the links between heat and climate change impacts in cities through technology-enabled sessions.
Against a background of declining interest in STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) education in schools throughout industrialised nations, Associate Professor Pfautsch will bring his specialist knowledge of urban heat to GCARE. He will collaborate with Professor Kumar to further develop the Centre’s Heat-Cool project – which helps school pupils to understand the relationship between heat and climate change impacts in cities through technology-enabled sessions – as well as delivering a public lecture on the subject.