Dr Seyed Hossein Hosseini

Fellowship focus: Using generative AI to advance system dynamics modelling in healthcare.
 
This Fellowship will strengthen and grow a partnership between the University of Surrey and the University of Sydney in healthcare modelling and simulation. The collaboration brings together experts in modelling, artificial intelligence and health systems research to address complex health and societal challenges. Dr Hosseini and his host will explore the integration of Generative AI (GenAI) in system dynamics modelling and assess its potential to enhance analytical capability, methodological innovation, decision support and policy planning. Planned activities include advancing research on GenAI within system dynamics modelling, delivering a seminar on public health modelling, and running a short workshop on system dynamics modelling.
 
 

Professor Philip Demokritou

Fellowship focus: Understanding the potential health risks of micro-nanoplastics to humans and developing effective mitigation solutions.

Plastics are inexpensive and versatile, making them ubiquitous in modern life, but their widespread use raises health concerns. As plastics degrade in the environment, they form micro-nanoplastics (MNPs), an important emerging focus of research. This Fellowship will assess current academic and research activities across partner institutions to identify interdisciplinary research and training opportunities in MNPs. Key aims include developing a framework for the assessment of human exposure to MNPs both indoors and in ambient environments; creating sustainable mitigation strategies for plastic waste management and control of potential MNP exposures; and exploring alternative and sustainable-by-design plastics for food packaging and beyond. The collaboration allows Professor Demokritou to share his Nanoscience and Advanced Materials Research Center expertise with Professor Kumar’s GCARE lab at the University of Surrey.

 

 

Dr Sasha Wilmoth

Fellowship focus: Tracing the evolution of verb forms in Western Desert languages of Australia.
 
Small differences in verb forms, as if people said ‘clean-ed’, ‘clean-ed-ed’, ‘clen-t’ and ‘clen-t-ed’ within close geographical locations, show how languages change and develop over time. Expressing a past tense meaning twice in the same word may seem unnecessary, but such extra endings can actually help make a language easier to learn and use. This idea is related to the Paradigm Cell-Filling Problem (PCFP), which looks at how speakers predict unknown word forms. This Fellowship will study the issue by examining verb patterns in twelve closely related Western Desert languages. The project will explore how verb systems are structured and how different cues contribute to the PCFP, increasing our understanding of this language family, with broader implications for historical linguistics, and theories of both the PCFP and ‘redundant’ suffixes.
 
 

Dr Joshua Gellers

Fellowship focus: Exploring posthuman law for Earth-space governance.
How to recognise and govern more-than-human entities – such as animals, nature and AI – across both terrestrial and orbital domains is a pressing challenge in contemporary legal thought. Dr Gellers’ Fellowship will bring together leading legal theorists and practitioners to test the portability of shared legal principles, including standing, guardianship, precaution and stewardship, across different entities and spatial scales. It aims to develop a trans-entity, Earth–space framework for legal doctrine, procedure and policy, and to compare existing models of status, standing and remedies available to more-than-human actors. The work will be shaped through a multidisciplinary workshop led by the School of Law research centres in collaboration with the Institute for People-Centred AI, the Institute for Sustainability and the Surrey Space Institute.
 
 

Professor Kenneth Himma

Fellowship focus: A conceptual analysis of law and authority.
The resurgence of authoritarian tendencies in Western democracies has made understanding the conditions of legitimate authority critically important. Determining when authority is morally justified requires rigorous analysis of the core concepts of law, authority and legitimacy. This Fellowship highlights the importance of methodological work, recognising that careful conceptual analysis is essential to conceptual engineering and re-engineering – approaches that aim to revise or create concepts when existing ones have problematic social implications. Professor Himma will work in collaboration with the Surrey Centre for Law and Philosophy, resulting in a series of academic publications alongside activities aimed at public engagement and broader impact.

Dr Pradeep Kumar Dammala

Fellowship focus: Enhancing risk-assessment tools for offshore wind turbines.
Developing sustainable, reliable and affordable ways to harvest offshore wind has become essential to supporting global clean energy goals. This includes practical tools that assess and mitigate risks to offshore wind turbine foundations that can jeopardise clean energy harvesting. This Fellowship will combine Dr Dammala’s risk modelling expertise with Dr Cui’s geotechnical knowledge to explore issues like earthquake risks, soil liquefaction and structural fatigue, with a view to creating a user-friendly framework for predicting and preventing foundation failures. 
 
 

Professor Bing Pan

Fellowship focus: Investigating the psycho-behavioural dynamics of crisis response in tourists.
This Fellowship will explore how tourists’ psychological traits shape their perceptions, motivations and risk-related behaviours during crises, and how these factors influence evacuation dynamics. Existing agent-based evacuation models typically treat tourists as homogenous agents who respond uniformly and instantaneously to evacuation orders, limiting behavioural realism. By explicitly modelling individual differences in decision-making under uncertainty and stress, Professor Pan and Professor Li’s research will produce more realistic simulations of tourist behaviour during emergencies, improving our ability to predict evacuation outcomes and inform the design of more effective risk communication and crisis management strategies. 

Dr Bobby Du

 

Fellowship focus: Investigating the role of electric ‘air taxis’ in transforming tourist mobility and destination accessibility.

The rapid rise of electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) aircraft, commonly known as air taxis, is transforming short-range travel. These lightweight, battery-powered vehicles enable fast, quiet and low-emission point-to-point transport without the need for runways. They have the potential to significantly enhance tourism mobility and visitor experiences, particularly in hard-to-reach or underserved destinations such as islands. This Fellowship will examine how eVTOL technology could reshape tourism travel, offering a sustainable alternative to road and short-haul air transport. Dr Du and his host will review current technological developments, pilot projects and aviation regulations, while identifying key implementation challenges including airspace management, noise concerns and charging infrastructure.

Dr David Martinez-Delgado

Fellowship focus: Exploring galaxy formation at the smallest scale and understanding dark matter.
In current galaxy formation theory, small galaxies form first and later merge to build larger ones. As they merge, stars can be pulled away, creating streams of ‘tidal debris’ that orbit the main galaxy. Studying this debris helps us understand a galaxy’s growth history. This Fellowship will compare new observations by Dr Martinez-Delgado of the outer regions of dwarf galaxies with advanced computer simulations. While most research has focused on the Milky Way, Dr Martinez-Delgado studies much smaller galaxies. The project will produce a publication comparing observations and models, and a seminar for the Astrophysics Research Group.

Dr hab. Anna Stachniuk

Fellowship focus: Enhancing food safety through proteomic authentication of meat products.

Food authenticity is a global challenge that impacts public health, consumer trust and compliance with regulations. This Fellowship will bring together experts from the Medical University of Lublin and Surrey to share knowledge on detecting food adulteration. The focus will be on using proteomics and advanced liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry techniques to identify food adulteration. This will be an opportunity to exchange experiences, compare analytical methods and share expertise in data interpretation. The collaboration aims to build a long-term partnership, strengthen research skills in both teams and support better food authentication to protect consumers and promote public health.

Dr Shaona Barik

Fellowship focus: Advancing dialogues on Victorian mobilities between Britain and India with a focus on representations of mesmerism (a form of hypnotism).

During her Fellowship Dr Barik will undertake archival research on collaborations, encounters and cross-cultural exchanges between the UK and India on the topic of mesmerism in the Victorian era. Her research will consider how mesmerism facilitated trade and traffic in goods and people between the UK and India (focusing on England and Calcutta), and explore the intersections of race, class and gender these interactions brought about. Leveraging knowledge in Surrey’s ‘Victoriographies’ and ‘Mobilities in Literature and Culture’ groups, the Fellowship will include a joint publication to disseminate research, a public lecture at Surrey, and an exhibition at Visva-Bharati University.

Dr Oyetunde Oyeyemi

Fellowship focus: Developing an AI-driven assessment of malaria interventions to identify effective control policies in Nigeria.

Ninety-five per cent of the world’s malaria cases occur in the WHO African Region, with Nigeria being the most affected country. Dr Oyeyemi plans to leverage the ‘OpenMalaria’ model from the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute and use AI-based simulations to identify the most effective malaria control policies for Nigeria. This state-of-the-art epidemiological model could be extended to other settings and geographical contexts, helping to shape policies across Sub-Saharan Africa. The Fellowship will contribute to the Sustainable Developments in Neglected Communities programme in the Surrey Institute for Sustainability, and align with key UN Sustainable Development Goals.

Dr Marta Prandelli

Fellowship focus: Combining empirical and theoretical insights on intersex issues and LGBTQ+ politics.

While intersex is increasingly recognised as part of the LGBTQ+ acronym, there are concerns that this framing can obscure the unique needs of intersex individuals. Bringing together two of the leading scholars in this field, and leveraging knowledge within Surrey’s Sex, Gender and Sexualities Research Centre, this Fellowship will foster much-needed critical discussion on the subject. Dr Prandelli and Dr Griffiths plan to hold a seminar on the tensions and possibilities of the LGBTQ+ acronym, begin research on the historical and contemporary tensions across and beyond the LGBTQ+ acronym, and establish a network that enables innovative intersex research.

Dr Mohamed Elsadek

Fellowship focus: Investigating the human acceptance and psychological benefits of nature-based solutions to the climate crisis.

Nature-based solutions such as urban parks and street trees can mitigate climate and health risks at a time when an increasing proportion of people live in cities. This Fellowship will combine Tongji University’s knowledge of landscape architecture with Surrey’s expertise in environmental psychology to conduct research which explores people’s acceptance of, and the psychological benefits offered by, nature-based solutions in UK and Chinese cities. Deepening an existing partnership, the Fellowship will take a holistic approach, focusing on the interrelationships between biodiversity, climate change and human health.

Dr Anastasia Olga (Olnancy) Tzirides

Fellowship focus: Promoting evidence-informed pedagogical use of Generative AI in learning design and teaching in the higher education sector.

Generative AI (GenAI) has significant potential to transform educational practices in higher education. Current research is largely student-focused, with little attention given to academics’ perspective. Addressing this gap, Dr Tzirides’ Fellowship will investigate how GenAI can enhance academic staff’s learning design practices, and translate research into actionable guidance for teaching staff on using GenAI responsibly, balancing innovation and efficiency with ethics. Outcomes will include a workshop and demonstration of GenAI tools for Surrey staff and a collaborative case study where participants use the CyberScholar GenAI Writing Tool in educational scenarios.

Dr Tanja Beer

Fellowship focus: Re-thinking traditional design practices by integrating ecological principles into scenographic thinking and production.

Award-winning ecological designer, community artist and academic Dr Beer will bring her 3 Cs (Co-creation, Celebration and Circulation) framework for sustainable scenography to the GSA. She will run an all-staff workshop with the aims of exploring how to make theatre more sustainable and re-thinking the systems that underpin the creative process. The Fellowship will include a lecture to researchers in the Institute for Sustainability, and a series of workshops with undergraduate students, which will include short performance pieces shared with the wider University community.

Associate Professor Hengyun (Neil) Li

Fellowship focus: Exploring the impact of Generative AI on hotel marketing, and how employees can use it effectively.

Generative AI (which can create original content in response to a user’s prompt or request) has the potential to enhance aspects of hotel marketing, but understanding the human experience is vital to using this emerging technology effectively. In this Fellowship Professor Li and Dr Liu will use a combination of in-depth interviews and scenario-based experiments to assess how it affects the quality and productivity of hotel marketing employees. The research will also explore the impact of Generative AI on factors such as employee job satisfaction, self-efficacy, and beliefs about automation. Fellowship outcomes will include a hybrid seminar for international participants on Generative AI in tourism and hospitality.

Dr Chaithra Puttaswamy

Fellowship focus: Exploring the growth of complex predicates in Dravidian languages of southern India.

Languages change over time, but how do grammatical structures such as ‘complex predicates’ (multi-word structures that behave like a single verb) evolve? Focusing on Dravidian languages, which have some of the most intricate verbal systems found in any language, this Fellowship examines how the expansion of grammatical systems is regulated and facilitated by existing language structure. Dr Puttaswamy will collaborate with Surrey Morphology Group, using fine-grained coding of variation across different complex predicates to test the hypothesis that speakers notice patterns in their language and extend them to new environments through analogy.

Dr Bryan Khan

Fellowship focus: Establishing intellectual property (IP) protection for acoustic signatures in physical spaces.

Room Impulse Responses (RIRs) – a form of acoustic data representation – play a critical role in today’s audio technology applications. However, they may not meet the legal criteria for IP protection because they fall into a unique category as modelled representations of physical realities. Aimed at reducing uncertainty around IP in digital audio signal processing, Dr Khan will work with academics in Surrey’s Institute of Sound Recording to review existing standards, interview audio practitioners, and develop guidelines for digital audio researchers who want to protect their research outputs as a commercial asset and resource.

Dr Anthony Halog

Fellowship focus: Exploring the use of AI and digital tools to make green hydrogen production more efficient and sustainable.

Improving the efficiency of green hydrogen production is critical in the global shift to sustainable energy. The primary aim of this project is to develop a ‘digital twin’ – a virtual model which can simulate and optimise green hydrogen production processes in real time. What sets this Fellowship apart is its interdisciplinary approach. Dr Halog will collaborate with academics from chemical engineering, sustainability, civil engineering and business with the aim of not only providing technical solutions, but also helping industry to develop sustainable business practices, enabling greener and more circular operations.