Mason Porter
Senior Research Fellow; Professor of Mathematics, UCLAI am a Professor in the Department of Mathematics at UCLA. Previously, I was Professor of Nonlinear and Complex Systems in the Mathematical Institute at University of Oxford.
I was also a Tutorial Fellow in Somerville College. Before then, I studied at Caltech and Cornell, before a postdocs at Georgia Tech and and Berkeley.
I am also a die-hard fan of the Los Angeles Dodgers. You can also find me on Facebook and Twitter (@masonporter). I am also involved with the Legends of Caltech movie and co-edited Legends of Caltech III.
Comparing community structure to characteristics in online collegiate social networks
Traud, A; Kelsic, E; Mucha, P; Porter, M
SIAM Review issue 3 volume 53 page 526-543 (1 December 2011)
A mathematical model for the dynamics and synchronization of cows
Sun, J; Bollt, E; Porter, M; Dawkins, M
Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena issue 19 volume 240 page 1497-1509 (15 September 2011)
Dynamic reconfiguration of human brain networks during learning.
Bassett, D; Wymbs, N; Porter, M; Mucha, P; Carlson, J; Grafton, S
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A issue 18 volume 108 page 7641-7646 (3 May 2011)
Discrete breathers in one-dimensional diatomic granular crystals.
Boechler, N; Theocharis, G; Job, S; Kevrekidis, P; Porter, M; Daraio, C
Phys Rev Lett issue 24 volume 104 page 244302- (18 June 2010)
Community structure in time-dependent, multiscale, and multiplex networks
Mucha, P; Richardson, T; Macon, K; Porter, M; Onnela, J
Science issue 5980 volume 328 page 876-878 (14 May 2010)
Charlotte Potts
Woolley Fellow & Tutor in Classical Archaeology; Sybille Haynes Lecturer in Etruscan and Italic Archaeology and ArtI joined Oxford as the Sybille Haynes lecturer after an enjoyable career as a content developer for museum exhibitions and visitor attractions in New Zealand, Australia, Southeast Asia, and the United Kingdom, between degrees from Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand), University College London, and the University of Oxford.
These experiences have given me special interest in the stories we tell about the past through its material culture. My research focuses on using archaeology, and in particular architecture, to reconstruct the beliefs, institutions, and economies of societies with little or no surviving literature. I am especially interested in how the remains of buildings reveal information about perceptions of the divine and the role of cult, as shown by my work on the civic, social, and economic functions of temples in Archaic central Italy. My research also challenges traditional divisions between pre-Roman and Roman archaeology by examining continuities in material culture and refining our perceptions of early Rome.
My teaching likewise spans pre-Roman and Roman material. I teach papers on the archaeology of Italy between the Iron Age and end of the Roman Empire, and have special interests in Roman art and the archaeology of religion.
‘Architecture in Ancient Central Italy: Connections in Etruscan and Early Roman Building’
January 2021
‘Introduction: Building Connections’ in Architecture in Ancient Central Italy: Connections in Etruscan and Early Roman Building
January 2021
‘Etruria (Italy), c. 900-300 BCE’ in ‘Sir Banister Fletcher’s Global History of Architecture’
May 2019
‘Made in Etruria: Recontextualizing the ramo secco’, American Journal of Numismatic, 2019
Lord Powell of Bayswater
Foundation FellowLord Powell of Bayswater KCMG was Private Secretary and adviser on foreign affairs and defence to Margaret Thatcher when she was Prime Minister and continued in the same role for the first months of John Major’s government.
Since 1992 he has been an international businessman, and currently serves on the boards of LVMH in France, Northern Trust and Textron in the US and Hong Kong Land Holdings and Mandarin Oriental Hotels in Asia.
Lord Powell is Chairman of the International Advisory Boards of Rolls Royce and of Bowmark and a member of the Advisory Boards of Barrick Gold, Thales (UK), Chubb Insurance and the New York Council on Foreign Relations. Among other roles he is Chairman of Atlantic Partnership, Chairman of the Trustees of the Said Business School at Oxford University, Chairman of the British Museum Trust and a Trustee of the Aspen Institute in the USA. He is an Honorary Fellow of the Ashmolean Museum.
Fay Probert
Dorothy Hodgkin Career Development FellowFay graduated from Warwick University with a BSc in Mathematics before moving to the Department of Chemistry where she completed an MSc in Mathematical Biology and Biophysical Chemistry.
Since completing her PhD in Analytical Chemical Biology, Fay has worked at Bruker (UK) and the Medical Research Council (Harwell) applying analytical chemistry techniques, with a focus on NMR spectroscopy, to a range of biological and medical research questions. Throughout her postdoctoral career, Fay’s research has focused on using a multidisciplinary combination of analytical chemistry, mathematics, and biology techniques to understand the chemistry of small molecule pathways associated with disease. In particular, Fay is interested in better understanding the chemical processes associated with inflammation in the brain with the aim of improving the diagnosis and treatment of these diseases.
Fay joined the Department of Pharmacology at Oxford in October 2015 as a senior postdoctoral researcher in the Anthony lab managing a small team of metabolomics researchers and leading several projects which aim to develop NMR metabolomics and multivariate statistical methods to better diagnose, monitor, and predict treatment response in inflammatory diseases of the central nervous system. In 2018, Fay was awarded a Junior Research Fellowship at Somerville College, Oxford.
In 2021 Fay was a awarded a Dorothy Hodgkin Career Development Fellowship in the Chemistry Department.
Fay has received research funding from the MS Society, MRC, EPSRC, BSRC, Merck, and Numares AG.
Alice Prochaska
Honorary Fellow; Former PrincipalDr Alice Prochaska is a historian. She was Principal of Somerville from 2010 to 2017 and a Pro Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford from 2015 to 2017.
An alumna of Somerville , she holds both her BA and DPhil in Modern History from the University of Oxford. Her career has spanned museums, archives and libraries, working both in national organisations (the UK National Archives and the British Library) as well as universities on both sides of the Atlantic (University of London, Yale and now Oxford). Dr Prochaska is a Fellow and one-time Vice President of the Royal Historical Society. She has managed large staffs of scholars, librarians and archivists, and has chaired national and international boards and committees dealing with archives and scholarly resources. She is currently chair of the Sir Winston Churchill Archive Trust and the Institute of Historical Research Trust, a commissioner of the Marshall Aid Commemoration Commission, member of the General Federation of Trade Unions Education Trust, and an adviser to the OP Jindal Global University and other organisations in India. During her tenure as Principal of Somerville, she was instrumental in establishing the Oxford India Centre for Sustainable Development and the Margaret Thatcher Scholarship Trust, and in securing additions to student accommodation in the College. Her current scholarly interest focuses on the history of cultural restitution, and the relationship between national heritage and national identity, with a special interest in the period of the Second World War.
Find out more about Alice Prochaska here.
Frank Prochaska
Senior Research FellowDr Frank Prochaska is an historian of modern Britain and the author of a number of critically acclaimed books.
He was born in America but has lived much of his life in Britain and has dual nationality. He has taught at universities on both sides of the Atlantic and in recent years taught British history at Yale. He moved to Oxford in 2010, where he became a member of Somerville and Wolfson Colleges. He has been a Research Fellow at the Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, London University, and a Visiting Fellow, All Souls College, Oxford. He lectures and reviews widely and contributes to media programs and the press in Britain on such subjects as contemporary social policy and the monarchy. He is an Honorary Fellow of the Institute of Historical Research, London University, a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and a Senior Research Fellow at Somerville. As a scholar of Victorian social reform and ideas, he helped to establish the programme of work on the John Stuart Mill Library and its rich store of Mill annotations that is currently underway in Somerville.
See more about Frank Prochaska here.
Books
‘Eagle and the Crown: Americans and the British Monarchy’ (2016)
‘Eminent Victorians on American Democracy: The View from Albion’ (2013)
‘The Memoirs of Walter Bagehot’ (2013)
‘The Eagle and the Crown: Americans and the British Monarchy’ (2008)
‘Christianity and Social Service in Modern Britain: The Disinherited Spirit’ (2006)
‘The Republic of Britain: 1760-2000: 1760 to the Present’ (2000)
‘Philanthropy and the Hospitals of London: The King’s Fund, 1897-1990’ (1997)
‘Royal Bounty: The Making of a Welfare Monarchy’ (1995)
‘The Voluntary Impulse: Philanthropy in Modern Britain’ 1989
‘Women and Philanthropy in Nineteenth Century England’ (1980)
Stephen Pulman
Emeritus FellowProfessor Pulman’s research interests are in computational linguistics: the development of computer programs that behave as if they understood English. He is an Emeritus Professor of Computer Science, and is currently a senior researcher at Apple, working on Siri.
Susan Purver
Assistant LibrarianSusan has worked in Somerville Library for thirty years, and before that was an undergraduate at Somerville.
She deals with most of the day-to-day running of the Library, and with ordering books; she also has a long-term project to catalogue the College’s antiquarian and special collections. She is usually to be found in the main Library office, except when buried in the depths of the stacks. She has a cataloguing blog where you can follow her progress (or lack of it) in cataloguing.
Timothy Rafferty
MCR SecretaryHi there, I’m Tim the MCR Secretary. If you have any queries relating to the running of the MCR or the constitution, please do get in touch. I also take responsibility for organising the general meetings so if you have any motions to submit send them to my official MCR email.
Outside of the committee, I research wind turbines using computational fluid dynamic techniques. I am a keen climber, runner and rower for the college. Feel free to contact me if you have any questions, even if it is about running!
Dr June Raine DBE
Honorary FellowDr Raine qualified in medicine at Oxford University, and undertook postgraduate research leading to an MSc in pharmacology.
After general medical posts and Membership of the Royal Colleges of Physicians (MRCP), she joined the then Medicines Division in 1985, and has worked in several licensing areas, including the Review of Medicines, new drugs and abridged. Prior to becoming Chief Executive, June was Director of Vigilance and Risk Management of Medicines from 1999 to 2019.
As Chief Executive, June chairs the Executive Committee, which is the highest decision-making body in the agency. Dr Raine was made a DBE in the New Year Honours List 2022 for services to healthcare and the Covid-19 response.
Tessa Rajak
Senior Research Fellow; Emeritus Professor of Ancient History, University of Reading; Senior Associate of the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish StudiesProfessor Tessa Rajak is a British Historian and Emeritus Professor of Ancient History at the University of Reading. She is also a Senior Associate of the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies.
Her research focuses primarily on Judaism in the Hellenistic and Roman periods, and she is an expert on the writings of Josephus.
Tessa Rajak studied at Oxford, submitting her DPhil in 1974. She became Professor of Ancient History at Reading and was the 95/96 Grinfield Lecturer in Oxford. She edited the Journal of Jewish Studies from 2000-03.
Monographs
Flavius Josephus. Jewish History and the Greek World. Dissertation, University of Oxford 1974.
Josephus. The Historian and his Society. Fortress Press, Philadelphia 1984
The Jewish Dialogue with Greece and Rome. Studies in Cultural and Social Interaction (= Arbeiten zur Geschichte des antiken Judentums und des Urchristentums. Band 48). Brill, Leiden 2000,
Translation and survival. The Greek Bible of the Ancient Jewish Diaspora. Oxford University Press, Oxford 2009
Edited volumes
with John North and Judith Lieu: The Jews Among Pagans and Christians in the Roman Empire. Routledge, London 1992,
with Gillian Clark: Philosophy and Power in the Graeco-Roman World. Essays in Honour of Miriam Griffin. Oxford University Press, Oxford 2002
with Sarah Pearce, James Aitken and Jennifer Dines: Jewish Perspectives on Hellenistic Rulers. University of California Press, Berkeley 2007
Nicola Ralston
Honorary FellowNicola Ralston served as the Head of Global Investment Consulting of Hewitt Associates Inc., from October 2004 to 2006.
Ms. Ralston served as the Head of Global Investment at Schroders. Ms. Ralston oversaw an eight-fold increase in assets under management at Schroders, retired from Schroders in 2001 to spend more time with her family. She remained active in the fund management industry, becoming Chairman of the UK Society of Investment Professionals, the investment management industry’s professional body, from 2002 to 2003. She spent 22 years with Schroders, rising to be Head of investment management in 1999. In the role she had overall responsibility for Schroders’ investment resources worldwide. Ms. Ralston started her financial career in 1977 moving to Schroders in 1979. She has been Chairman of Henderson Eurotrust Plc since March 26, 2014 and also has been its Director since September 1, 2013. She serves as an Executive Director of Liability Solutions. She served as an Executive Manager of Schroders Plc. She serves as a Director of Schroder Emerging Market Debt Opportunity Fund Ltd., and Schroder Japanese Long Short Fund Ltd. She served as a Director of The Edinburgh Investment Trust Plc from September 29, 2003 to July 19, 2013. She served as a Director of Director of Schroder Credit Renaissance Fund Ltd., of Schroder Investment Management North America Inc. Ms. Ralston is a Business Adviser to CSTIM and a director on several hedge funds and a governor of the CFA Institute.
Gavin Ralston
Foundation FellowProfessor Sir Venkatraman Ramakrishnan
Honorary Fellow; Nobel LaureateVenkatraman ‘Venki’ Ramakrishnan is a Nobel Prize-winning biologist whose many scientific contributions include his work on the atomic structure of the ribosome.
As the site within living cells where the genetic information is read to synthesise proteins from amino acids, improved understanding of the ribosome has yielded many fundamental biological insights.
He determined the atomic structure of the 30S ribosomal subunit followed by structures of the entire ribosome in many different states and in complexes with several antibiotics. More recently, he has been using electron microscopy to visualise ribosomes in action in higher organisms. This work has advanced our understanding of how the ribosome works and how antibiotics inhibit it. In the past he has also worked on histone and chromatin structure, which help us to understand how DNA is organised in cells.
Venki received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on ribosomal structure and was knighted in 2012. He is a Member of the US National Academy of Sciences, Leopoldina and EMBO, and a Foreign Member of the Indian National Science Academy. He was President of the Royal Society from November 2015 until November 2020.
Dame Esther Rantzen
Honorary FellowDame Esther Rantzen DBE CBE is a celebrated broadcaster and campaigner.
Dame Esther has appeared in more than 2,000 TV programmes including documentaries, talk shows, reality shows and quizzes as well as writing columns for The Times, Telegraph and Daily Mail, in addition to 5 books.
In 1986 Dame Esther launched Childline, the free confidential helpline for children and young people, which she chaired for nineteen years. The charity has now helped more than 4 million children and young people, both online and via the telephone. The Childline model has now been successfully copied in 150 countries around the world.
In 2012, Dame Esther launched a new confidential helpline for older people, The Silver Line Helpline, which provides information, friendship and advice 24 hours a day, every day of the year. The biggest single problem older people disclose is loneliness. Nationally launched in November 2013, it receives around 10,000 calls a week. Independently evaluated by the Centre for Social Justice in a Report entitled “When I get off the phone I feel like I belong to the human race” (a quote from a caller), and also by Anglia Ruskin University, it was found to target successfully the loneliest older people. Beside the Helpline, trained volunteers, The Silver Line Friends, provide a matched befriending service, and Silver Circles. She is Founder/President, and a Trustee of the charity, which merged with Age UK in December 2019.
After graduating from Somerville with an MA in English, she joined the BBC, first as a sound effects assistant, then a researcher. While training to be a producer/director in 1968, she became a researcher and reporter for Bernard Braden’s consumer programme “Braden’s Week”. When Braden returned to Canada in 1973, she became producer and presenter of its successor, “That’s Life!”. The show ran for 21 years and at its peak drew an audience of 22.5 million. It achieved fame for its talking dogs, Jobsworth Awards and campaigns on behalf of abused children, organ transplants, safe playgrounds, and to provide justice for consumers. Its most viewed episode featured Sir Nicholas Winton being introduced for the first time to the survivors he had saved from the Holocaust including Lord Alfred Dubs. She continues to appear on TV, and regularly contributes to “The One Show”, political and news programmes on many different topics especially those relating to broadcasting, growing old ungracefully, and to the abuse of children and older people.
A creative producer as well as a presenter, she invented the documentary series “The Big Time” which discovered Sheena Easton, created the “Children of Courage” segment of “Children in Need” and invented “Hearts of Gold” which ran for seven years, honouring unsung heroes and heroines.
In addition to being the first woman to receive the Dimbleby Award from BAFTA she has also received the Royal Television Society’s Special Judges Award for Journalism, the Snowdon Award for services to disabled people, 6 honorary doctorates, an honorary Fellowship from Somerville College, Oxford and a Lifetime Achievement Award from Women in Film and Television.
She received an OBE for Services to Broadcasting in 1991, in 2006 a CBE for Services to Children, and became a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2015 for her work for children and older people, through Childline and The Silver Line.
Steve Rayner
Senior Tutor, Tutor for Graduates and Tutor for AdmissionsSteve Rayner oversees the College’s academic activities, including admissions and outreach, and supports Fellows and Students in their teaching and learning.
He is responsible for overseeing the work of the College Access and Outreach Team, including Somerville’s regional work as part of the Oxford South-East consortium of colleges (see Oxford for South East | University of Oxford) and is a trustee of Universify Education. As a native of Stoke-on-Trent and a season ticket holder at Stoke City Football club for over twenty years, until that particular mix of joy and suffering was rudely interrupted by the pandemic, he is also particularly interested in access and outreach in Staffordshire, Cheshire and Shropshire. As a result, Somerville is a member of the Uni Connect partnership Higher Horizons+ (see Higher Horizons+ – Part of the Uni Connect Programme).
As Senior Tutor, Steve is responsible for the work of the Academic Office, which supports graduate and undergraduate students, along with tutors and Fellows, in their academic activities. This includes supporting Somerville applicants and selectors through the undergraduate admissions process here at Oxford.
Steve’s background is in Physics, specifically Very High Energy Gamma Ray Astronomy research, but his work at Somerville encompasses all subjects studied by Somervillians.