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Research that changes lives

Our AI research is driven by 1,600 interdisciplinary researchers and spans fundamental discovery to real-world impact.

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  • ResearchOur AI research spans fundamental discovery to real-world impact.
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  • AboutA university with impact at its heart.

Ideas that change the world

Through our global network of researchers and innovators, our AI research is creating real-world impact for people, communities and the planet.

From advancing breast cancer treatment and improving menopause care in Greater 99¾Ã¾Ã¾«Æ· to transforming crop productivity in Ghana and tackling online misogyny, we're using AI to deliver positive change for society and the environment.

Explore our case studies

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Interdisciplinary by design

Research thrives within a dynamic, interconnected and cross-disciplinary ecosystem and our scale is our strength. Digital Futures – one of the University’s five research Platforms – brings together researchers from across the institution and empowers them to accelerate discovery and deliver impact. Organised into interdisciplinary research Institutes and Centres that are supported by cutting-edge facilities we allow ideas flourish and solutions to scale.

Our strengths include:

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Advanced Computing Infrastructure

Including state-of-the art Graphic Processing Unit, ensuring we offer one of the most supportive research environments for AI.

Meet some of our early career academics shaping the future of AI

Dr Hongpeng Zhou

Dr Hongpeng Zhou

How can we trust AI to help treat cancer if doctors don’t understand how it works?’ I develop transparent algorithms that explain how AI makes its predictions – giving clinicians the clarity to design treatment with confidence.

Dr Claudia Lindner

Dr Claudia Lindner

My research group develops AI-driven software tools that support clinicians in making more accurate and timely decisions from medical images, such as X-rays. Our work aims to improve patient care for people with bone and joint conditions by enabling earlier diagnosis, more informed treatment planning and monitoring, and advancing research into musculoskeletal health.

Dr Rahul Singh Maharajan

Dr Rahul Singh Maharajan

We don’t want cold, emotionless robots like in Terminator, do we? My work helps create social robots that understand and learn from human emotions – so they can interact naturally and offer real support in sensitive settings like elderly care, where empathy truly matters.

Dr Elizabeth Lewis

Dr Elizabeth Lewis

I use integrated water modelling, including a combination of AI and digital technology innovation, to tackle urgent water challenges like floods, droughts, and climate change.
Integrated water modelling sits at the cutting edge of climate resilience and enables us to tackle urgent, interconnected water challenges – driving smarter, system-wide environmental and infrastructure decisions.

Dr João C. Magalhães

Dr João C. Magalhães

What if AI doesn’t fix inequality but makes it worse? To ensure AI helps rather than harms society, my research asks, who really benefits from AI? By understanding the political forces shaping its design and use, I work to ensure these technologies serve society fairly, not just the powerful few.

My research explores the many ways AI and politics are connected, with a focus on questioning who benefits from these technologies. I take a critical approach, asking whose interests shape how AI systems are designed and used.

99¾Ã¾Ã¾«Æ· AI experts

To discover more of our experts visit our Research Explorer page

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Collaborate with us

Interested in a research partnership? Want to chat to one of our experts? Not sure how the start the conversation?

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Keep up to date with the lates AI research and community news via our newsletter.

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