Bryony Sheaves
Research Fellow (Somerville); Research Clinical Psychologist (Experimental Psychology); Honorary Consultant Clinical Psychologist (Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust)My work aims to improve psychological treatments for people experiencing severe mental health problems, with a particular focus on: i) distressing voices; and, ii) sleep disruption.
In my research, I have developed a new psychological framework for understanding why voices cause distress: listening to and believing derogatory and threatening voices. The theory was built from patient interviews and tested in 591 NHS patients who hear voices. I aim to develop this into a psychological treatment to help NHS patients who hear voices to feel less emotionally affected by them.
As part of the wider Oxford Cognitive Approaches to Psychosis team I have worked on several studies which have demonstrated that sleep disruption is one contributory cause of mental health problems, including psychotic experiences. I led a pilot trial testing a sleep intervention for psychiatric inpatient wards. The treatment was feasible to deliver. The patients who received it experienced reductions in insomnia, and there were promising reductions in the duration of inpatient admissions. I have a particular interest in nightmares, their causes and the consequences for other mental health problems. Our pilot trial demonstrated that a brief CBT intervention for nightmares showed promising reductions in nightmares, insomnia and paranoia in patients experiencing psychosis.
I am an HCPC registered Clinical Psychologist and hold an honorary clinical contract with Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust. I completed my doctorate in clinical psychology at the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London, following which I joined the Oxford Cognitive Approaches to Psychosis research group as part of the Wellcome Trust funded Sleep and Circadian Neuroscience Institute. I have since been funded by an NIHR Clinical Doctoral Fellowship and a Development and Skills Enhancement Award.
Sheaves, B., Rek, R., Freeman, D. (2023). Nightmares and psychiatric symptoms: a systematic review of longitudinal, experimental, and clinical trial studies. Clinical Psychology Review, 100:102241. DOI: 10.1016/j.cpr.2022.102241.
Sheaves, B., Johns, L., Loe, B.S., Bold, E., Černis, E., The McPin Hearing Voices Lived Experience Advisory Panel, Molodynski, A., Freeman, D. (2022). Listening to and believing derogatory and threatening voices. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 49(1): 151-160. doi: 10.1093/schbul/sbac101.
Freeman, D., Sheaves, B., Waite, F., Harvey, A. G., & Harrison, P. J. (2020). Sleep disturbance and psychiatric disorders. The Lancet Psychiatry, 7(7), 628–637. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2215-0366(20)30136-X
Sheaves, B., Freeman, D., Isham, L., McInerney, J., Nickless, A., Yu, L-M… Barrera, A., … (2018). Stabilising sleep for patients admitted at acute crisis to a psychiatric hospital (OWLS): an assessor-blind pilot randomised controlled trial. Psychological Medicine, 48:1694-1704. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291717003191
Helen Flatley
Departmental LecturerDr Peggie Rimmer
Foundation FellowDr Peggie Rimmer went from being the first person in her family to study at university to one of the leading voices of CERN’s computing revolution, heading a team including Professor Sir Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web.
Born and raised in Liverpool, Dr Rimmer also began her academic career there. She gained the top degree in mathematics and physics from the University of Liverpool, followed by a first class Honours degree in physics. In 1961, she came to Oxford, matriculated at Lady Margaret Hall, and obtained a DPhil in nuclear physics. She then spent two years as a Junior Research Fellow at Somerville. In 1967, Dr Rimmer took up a two-year Fellowship at CERN and, relishing the company of 10,000 particle physicists, based her career there.
During her time at CERN, a fascination with the new computing equipment then emerging led Dr Rimmer to specialise in software for data acquisition and networking. Specifically, she led the group tasked with enabling standardised data collection for the multiple complex experiments being undertaken across the anarchic jumble of mini-computers, operating systems and programming languages then in use. In 1984, Tim Berners-Lee joined this team, conducting work that directly informed his Web prototype. Dr Rimmer subsequently led the CERN public relations group. Her last role prior to retirement was as Scientific Secretary to the Research Review Board.
In addition to her distinguished career, Dr Rimmer is a long-standing advocate for widening access to higher education. In 2012, she established the Peggie Rimmer Bursary for Women in Science at Somerville to enable more women to excel in STEM subjects. In 2023, she expanded this support through the Dr Peggie Rimmer Sanctuary Fund. This will transform the College’s ability to support its Sanctuary Scholars, providing those who have been displaced due to conflict, persecution or other serious human rights violations with a pathway to Oxford and support once they’re here.
Read more about Dr Peggie Rimmer’s career
Read more about the Dr Peggie Rimmer Sanctuary Fund
Professor Bolanle Awe
Honorary FellowBolanle Awe (Yoruba: Bọ́láńlé (Fájẹ́m̄bọ́là) Awẹ́) is a Nigerian and Yoruba history professor and pioneer of feminist history, intersectional thought and decolonisation.
Professor Awe was born on January 28, 1933, in the town of Ilesa, Nigeria. After taking a Master’s in History from St Andrew’s, she came to Somerville to read for her DPhil in 1958. She returned to Nigeria in 1960, where she became the first woman formally appointed to academic office in a Nigerian university. Following a stint at the University of Lagos, she returned to Ibadan, where she was promoted to Professor of Oral History in 1976.
Awe’s work is ground-breaking on several fronts. Her interest in oral history has made her a pioneer in documenting the pre-colonial histories of Nigeria and the Yoruba people, as well as an early advocate for the decolonisation of African history. She is also pioneering as a feminist historian, where her use of oral history helped restore the narratives of previously overlooked or misrepresented women such as Efunsetan Aniwura.
Awe was one of those pioneering women who began to use the master’s tools of academic knowledge and power to demolish the house built on male hegemony.’
TOYIN FALOLA, HONORARY PROFESSOR, UNIVERSITY OF CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA
Awe was also one of the first people to critique the Western, liberal feminist position which universalises women’s subjugation under patriarchal rule. As an advocate of nuanced intersectional thought, Awe argued that we can better serve women’s causes by understanding the history of oppression from culture to culture. In 1983, Awe was made an Officer of the Order of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. She retired from teaching and government roles in 1998. In 2005 she became the Pro-Chancellor of the University of Nigeria in Nsukka, and in 2018 she received an honorary doctorate from the University of Ibadan on its seventieth anniversary.
Afua Kyei
Honorary FellowAfua was appointed Chief Financial Officer, Executive Director of the Bank of England aged 36 in 2019, making her the first black senior executive in the Bank’s 329 year history. Her tenure so far has seen the Bank handle unprecedented challenges, including Brexit, the Covid-19 pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the September 2022 mini-budget, and the ongoing inflation and cost of living crises. Her current responsibilities include developing the Bank’s strategy and the financial governance of the Bank’s c. £1 trillion balance sheet.
Afua also serves as the Bank of England’s co-executive sponsor for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, and co-executive sponsor for Climate Change disclosure. In 2021, she won CFO of the Year at the Women in Finance Awards UK, and in October 2022 she was named in the Powerlist, which profiles 100 of Britain’s most influential Britons of African heritage. She was a 2022 listee in the Kindness & Leadership, 50 Leading Lights UK campaign. Afua is a key note speaker and represents the Bank in the Community, with Businesses and at international fora e.g. International Monetary Fund, G20, World Finance Forum & COP.
Afua joined the Bank from Barclays Bank (2012-2019) where she was the Chief Financial Officer Mortgages and played a key role in Barclays’ strategic cost transformation program, TRANSFORM, whilst in the Investment Bank and in Group COO. Previously, during the Global Financial Crisis, she was an Investment Banker at UBS (2007-2012) in the Financial Institutions Group and in Mergers and Acquisitions, Group Strategic Advisory. After university, Afua qualified as a Chartered Accountant (ICAS) with Ernst & Young, London.
Afua matriculated at Oxford University one year early, gaining an undergraduate Master’s in Chemistry (2000-2004). She was awarded a Junior Research Fellowship in Organic Chemistry by Princeton University.
Of her Honorary Fellowship, Afua said, “To be invited to be an Honorary Fellow of Somerville is the greatest honour and took me completely by surprise!”
“I loved my time at Somerville. It played such an instrumental role in my career and I made lifelong friends.”
Lovers and Strangers: An Immigrant History of Post-War Britain (London: Allen Lane/Penguin Random House, 2017).
The Best Are Leaving: Emigration and Post-War Irish Culture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015).
Dublin 1916: The Siege of the GPO (London: Profile, 2009; Harvard: Harvard University Press, 2009).
That Neutral Island: A History of Ireland during the Second World War (London, Faber and Faber, 2007; Boston, Harvard University Press, 2007).
General Editor, with Bourke, Kilfeather, Luddy, MacCurtain, Meaney, Ní Dhonnchadha, O’Dowd., The Field Day Anthology of Irish Women’s Writing and Traditions, Vols. 4 & 5. (Cork: Cork University Press in association with Field Day, 2002).
Reading Paul Muldoon (Newcastle-Upon-Tyne: Bloodaxe Books, 1998).
Improprieties: Politics and Sexuality in Northern Irish Poetry (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993).
Jenny Fitzgerald
College NurseMy name is Jenny. I have been a nurse and a midwife for 30 years and have worked in schools and colleges for the last 15 years .
I have three older children; the youngest has just finished University. I have two gorgeous grandchildren who now live in Thailand as my daughter is teaching there. I live in a tiny village on the outskirts of Oxford and love walking our two mad dogs around the fields and river nearby. I very much enjoy listening to music and playing it myself, with a mixed reviews from my family. One of my favourite hobbies is outdoor swimming in all weathers.
My role as your College Nurse is to support you with minor injuries and minor illness and to help signpost you to the relevant medical and dental services where appropriate. I also work with the welfare team to support anyone who is struggling with mental health or other issues.
I am available from : 9:00-15:00 weekdays during term time and can be contacted at pml.somervillenurse@.nhs.net
Please feel free to pop in during these times for a chat or advice . I look forward to meeting you and hope you will be very happy at Somerville.
Aanchal Saxena
Elizabeth Moir Scholar reading for Master's in Public Policy (MPP) (Matric Year: 2023)Aanchal is the first Elizabeth Moir Scholar, reading for an MPP at the Blavatnik School of Government . Before joining Oxford, she worked for the Food Innovation Hub at the World Economic Forum.
Her research interests include policies at the intersection of innovation, technology, and partnerships for enabling food systems transformation. Her work with the World Economic Forum, and the International Union for Conservation of Nature focused on blended finance and partnerships. She holds a Bachelor’s in Commerce from Delhi University and Master’s in Sustainable Development Practices from TERI School of Advanced Studies.
Her experience with some of the leading organisations in the world and eminent experts trained her in in policymaking, implementing, partnering, and financing for large, complex projects. These projects include monitoring the environmental, social, and economic effects of responsible tourism on tribal communities, surveying villages and designing comprehensive agri-solutions, and leading India’s first research team in assessing PPP models for marine conservation.
During her time at Oxford, she aims to work towards refining her skills and learning from her peers to lead effective collaboration.
Reema Sathe
Cyril Shroff Scholar reading for Master's in Public Policy (MPP) (Matric Year: 2023)Reema is a social entrepreneur dedicated to bridging income inequalities and advocating for the rights of vulnerable communities in India. Over nine years, she has been consistently engaged in grassroots work, building community-led income generation models with rural women, smallholding farmers, and indigenous populations.
Reema’s work centers around transforming agriculture and livestock supply chains, empowering rural communities to embrace entrepreneurship through micro-enterprises. In the State of Maharashtra, she pioneered the first-ever rural women-owned food brand. This initiative not only doubled their incomes but also inspired a set of women leaders challenging the status quo regarding women’s social and economic standing in their respective villages.
Along with her efforts on the ground, Reema serves as an advisor to various non-profits and community-led organizations in India. Her role in establishing Rajasthan’s first micro camel milk dairy benefited over 3,000 camel herders, providing a sustainable source of income amidst livelihood threats due to State policies and declining camel populations. Additionally, her expertise has catalyzed the formation of Manipur’s first women-only farmer producer company (FPC), empowering over 16,000 tribal women to embrace small-scale pig farming and create value-added products from forest resources. Her responsibility in this role revolved around policy recommendations and programs aimed at enhancing technology, finance, and livelihood opportunities for women in India and Bangladesh.
She has co-authored a regional chapter on South Asia for FAO’s (The food and agriculture organization of the United Nations) report on Gender and Climate-Smart Agriculture in collaboration with the University of East Anglia (UEA, Norwich). Reema is a Presidential Award Winner in the year 2017 (awarded by the Honorable President of India and the Ministry of Woman & Child Development), recognized for bringing positive economic change for rural women in Maharashtra.
She has been featured as one of the Most powerful women in the Indian impact business in Business Today and the Forbes Magazine. Her organization, Happy Roots, has been featured as one of the successful case studies bridging gender gap in agriculture by the United Nations & The World Bank Group. Reema is also a fellow at the British Asian Trust and UnLtd India. Her passion for building more inclusive, equitable, and transformative institutions and societies, leads her to Oxford, where she seeks to deepen her inquiry through theory and practice. Reema wishes to challenge her critical thinking, both inside and outside the classroom, to solve development problems at scale. Her interest lies at the intersection of economic development, multi-dimensional equality (including gender justice and community rights) and technology. When not working, Reema indulges in the joys of traveling, exercising, and savouring a good glass of wine.
Malina Mielczarek
JCR Women's OfficerHey, I’m Malina! (she/her) I’m a second-year studying Law and taking on the role of Women’s Officer. I love any and all music – attending concerts, listening with my headphones on or jamming along to in events, as well as bouldering/rock climbing!
Mary Scorer
JCR Terrace OfficerIsmail Rahman and Gabriel Oldknow
JCR Keeper of the SlinkyKeeper of our college pet!
Florence Cuckston-Fenn
JCR Arts OfficerSophie Stewart
JCR Disabilities OfficerElle Jardine
JCR Returning OfficerHello my name is Elle (they/them) and I am the Returning Officer!! I oversee open JCR meetings, the constitution, and the election process for the JCR 🙂 Feel free to email me with any questions you may have about those things (or if you just want a chat :p I am friendly.)
E-shen Low
JCR Suspended Students OfficerLucy Pollock
JCR Academic Affairs OfficerHey! I’m Lucy, one of two of Somerville’s LGBTQ+ Reps. Our role is to represent and support the queer community at Somerville. This mostly involves running events, but it also includes supporting student welfare and running the Gender Expression Fund (GEF). Our biggest events are the LGBTQ+ Formal, a formal dinner held in Michaelmas; and Pride Week, but there are smaller events on almost every week.
Sophia (Siman) Li
JCR Internationals OfficerHi! My name is Sophia (She/her). I am an incoming second year PPEist, and the JCR international officer! I like travelling, watching movies, and listening to Taylor Swift.
Grace Rogers (President), Margaret (Maggie) Williams and Eleanor (Nel) Wickins
JCR Freshers CommitteeHi! We’re Maggie (History), Grace (PPE) and Nel (Biology) and we are your freshers reps! This means we organise freshers week activities for the incoming first years and welcome them to life at Somerville. We’re always up for a chat if you have any questions/ concerns about starting at Oxford.
Eleanor (Nel) Wickins
JCR Environment and Ethics OfficerHi, I’m Nel, a second year biology student. I love birds and going on long walks whenever I can – especially by the coast! I’ll be one of the environment and ethics officers this year so if you ever want a chat about the role or help fill up the bird feeders, let me know!
Anish Vedantham
JCR IT and Communications OfficerRohan George
JCR Sports OfficerSam Wetmore
AV TechnicianSam (or, in Outlook’s global address list, Samuel) Wetmore is the person to whom you can turn for anything AV-related.
Based in the AV Office in Maitland, Sam provides a range of services to support the audio and visual needs of meetings, conferences and events, and manages the technical aspects of the meeting rooms. Sam is also happy to collaborate on any projects which involve photography or filming, and to provide support and advice with composition and editing. If you have an AV query, contact the AV desk by emailing av.desk@some.ox.ac.uk.
Aaron Maniam
Senior Associate; Fellow of Practice and Director, Digital Education Transformation, Blavatnik School of GovernmentAaron Maniam is an alumnus of Somerville (PPE 1998) and current Senior Associate, a position equivalent to Senior Research Fellow but for individuals whose contributions lie outside traditional academia.
In 2023, Aaron became Fellow of Practice and Director, Digital Education Transformation at the Blavatnik School of Government. Aaron’s work at the Blavatnik School focuses on issues connecting technology, public policy and public administration. He teaches on the School’s Master of Public Policy and executive education programmes, and convenes its digital “thematic cluster”, bringing together scholarship and practice on digital issues. He co-chairs the World Economic Forum’s Global Future Council on the Future of Technology Policy and is a member of the OECD’s Expert Group on Artificial Intelligence (AI) Futures.
He was previously a senior civil servant in the Singapore government, including being the founding Head of its Centre for Strategic Futures. Most recently, he served as Deputy Secretary (Industry & International) at the Singapore Ministry of Communications & Information, overseeing the ministry’s work in the digital economy, digital literacy and inclusion, and digital diplomacy – with a concurrent cross-government role coordinating Singapore’s strategy in global branding, soft power and public diplomacy.
At Somerville, Aaron will supervise graduate students interested in public policy and development issues. He will support the College’s career guidance programmes, particularly for students keen on government careers. As a trained facilitator of inter-religious dialogue, he will also contribute to the College’s multi-faith chapel programme.
Silvia Zanoli
Fulford Junior Research FellowI am a postdoctoral research assistant at the theoretical physics department of the University of Oxford. I work in the field of theoretical particle physics, the aim of which is understanding the final fundamental law of nature. In particular, my research is focussed on precision phenomenology for the Large Hadron Collider in Geneva.
You can view Silvia’s publications at https://inspirehep.net/authors/2029008
Jessica Thompson
Fulford Junior Research FellowTo respond adaptively in novel settings, intelligent agents must develop certain invariances (or abstractions) to map the infinite variety of the natural world to some smaller number of concepts, features, or values. Dr. Jessica Thompson investigates the computational principles that govern how those abstract representations develop through experience.
As a postdoctoral researcher in Chris Summerfield’s group at University of Oxford, she uses careful experimental design to establish the functional role of various computational ingredients in artificial neural networks trained on visual reasoning tasks. She completed her PhD at the International Laboratory for Brain, Music & Sound Research (BRAMS) and the Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute (Mila) at University of Montreal where her research focused on characterizing and comparing representational hierarchies in artificial neural networks and the human auditory system.
To view Jessica’s recent publications, visit https://www.psy.ox.ac.uk/people/jessica-thompson
Thomas Siday
Fulford Junior Research Fellow; Postdoctoral Researcher in Ultrafast Terahertz MicroscopyTo view Tom’s publications, visit https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=3gRhJNgAAAAJ&hl=en.
Miranda Rogers
Clinical Non-Stipendiary LecturerClare Rees-Zimmerman
Stipendiary Lecturer; Junior Research Fellow (Christchurch College)Academic Background
I am a chemical engineer by training, completing my undergraduate (integrated Masters) and PhD degrees at the University of Cambridge. For my MEng project, I modelled the patterns formed by blood spots during drying, under the supervision of Prof. Alex Routh. The project is important for developing accurate paper diagnostics using blood spots. I also undertook a number of industrial summer internships, including in R&D at Procter & Gamble. My PhD work examined how a mixture of differently sized particles self assembles in a thin film as it dries. I joined Christ Church as a Junior Research Fellow in October 2022.
Undergraduate Teaching
I enjoy teaching, having 4 years’ experience of small group teaching & demonstrating to Chemical Engineering undergraduates at the University of Cambridge.
Engineering (Thermofluids & Engineering in Society)
Research Interests
I am hosted by the Oxford Colloid group based in the Department of Chemistry. My current research addresses the need to make functional materials more sustainable, by using less of the expensive components, but still delivering the required properties. It does this using the science of colloidal hydrodynamics (the motion of small particles in fluid), deriving novel equations to model how mixtures of particles flow. In my fellowship, I am working on developing a new class of three-phase composite functional materials. The resulting coatings will have highly tuneable properties and I will explore the most promising applications, from reactor materials to tissue engineering. Regarding fundamental science, the required theoretical work will advance our understanding of multiphase colloidal hydrodynamics.
[1] Rees-Zimmerman, C. R., & Routh, A. F. (2021). Stratification in drying films: a diffusion–diffusiophoresis model. J. Fluid Mech., 928, A15. https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2021.800.
[2] Rees-Zimmerman, C. R., & Chaffin, S. T. (2021). Modelling the effect of bioreactor height on stripping fermentation products from the engineered bacterium Geobacillus thermoglucosidasius. Biochem. Eng. J., 176, 108195. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bej.2021.108195.
[3] Hertaeg, M. J., Rees-Zimmerman, C., Tabor, R. F., Routh, A., & Garnier, G. (2021). Predicting coffee ring formation upon drying in droplets of particle suspensions. J. Colloid Interface Sci., 591, 52–57. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2021.01.092.
Elizabeth MacGregor
Joanna Randall-MacIver Junior Research FellowElizabeth is the Joanna Randall-MacIver Junior Research Fellow at Somerville College, University of Oxford.
She previously studied at the Universities of Cambridge and Sheffield, and, following the completion of her doctorate in 2022, she held positions with the Sheffield Performer and Audience Research Centre and the Birmingham Music Education Research Group. At present she is also an external member of the Group for Research in Music Education at Cardiff Metropolitan University, and sits on the advisory panel for the national evaluation of Arts Council England’s Creativity Collaboratives. Elizabeth is the Assistant Editor for the international peer-reviewed journal, Research Studies in Music Education, and the recipient of an Early Career Researcher Career Development Fellowship from the British Educational Research Association.
Elizabeth’s current research focusses on the notion of ‘musical vulnerability’ – our inherent and situational openness to being affected (both positively and negatively) by the properties of music-making. She is working closely alongside music teachers at three secondary schools to understand how musical vulnerability is realised in classroom teaching and learning, and how it can be accounted for through ‘pedagogies of vulnerability’. She is also in the process of developing new resources for equipping pre-service music teachers to respond to experiences of musical vulnerability in diverse settings. Her research intersects with broader issues of inclusion, access, and care in music education, and has led to related projects in areas ranging from community singing to neurodiverse concert audiences.
Monograph
MacGregor, E. H. (forthcoming). Musical vulnerability: Receptivity, susceptibility & care in the music classroom. Routledge.
Edited Collections
Anderson, A., Cooke, C., Kinsella, V., & MacGregor, E. H. (Eds.) (forthcoming). Learning to teach music in the secondary school (4th ed.). Routledge.
Book Chapters
MacGregor, E. H. (forthcoming). Reframing music education through the lens of musical vulnerability. In C. Philpott & G. Spruce (Eds.), Debates in music teaching (2nd ed.). Routledge.
MacGregor, E. H. (2022). Exploring performing. In C. Cooke & C. Philpott (Eds.), A practical guide to teaching music in the secondary school(2nd ed.). Routledge.
MacGregor, E. H. (2021). Repeats & refrains; Musical revisionism. In J. Finney, C. Philpott, & G. Spruce (Eds.), Creative & critical projects in classroom music: Fifty years of Sound & Silence (pp. 203–208; 217–221). Routledge.
Finney, J. & MacGregor, E. H. (2021). Propaganda, protest & politics. In J. Finney, C. Philpott, & G. Spruce (Eds.), Creative & critical projects in classroom music: Fifty years of Sound & Silence (pp. 163–168). Routledge.
Journal Articles
Axtell, I., Anderson, A., Fautley, M., MacGregor, E. H., & Nenadic, E. (forthcoming). Beowulf Opera Scenes: Classroom music pedagogy & knowledge when composing an opera with primary-school children. Research Studies in Music Education.
Kinsella, V., MacGregor, E. H., & Nenadic, E. (forthcoming). Characterising affective and situational dimensions of creativity in the primary classroom through a posthuman lens. Education 3–13.
MacGregor, E. H. & Pitts, S. E. (forthcoming). ‘I don’t care who joins my choir’: Investigating attitudes to diversity & inclusion in lower- & upper-voice choirs in the United Kingdom. International Journal of Community Music.
Abbott, E. H. R., Critten, A., & MacGregor, E. H. (forthcoming). Relaxed Performances: Supporting aural diversity & neurodiversity among concert audiences in the United Kingdom. Sound Studies.
MacGregor, E. H. (2024). Please mind the gap: Reflecting on gender inequality in music higher education, one year on from Slow Train Coming. Music Education Research, 26(1), 88–95.
MacGregor, E. H. (2024). Characterizing musical vulnerability: Toward a typology of receptivity & susceptibility in the secondary music classroom. Research Studies in Music Education, 46(1), 28–47.
MacGregor, E. H. (2022). Conceptualizing musical vulnerability. Philosophy of Music Education Review, 30(1), 24–43.
MacGregor, E. H. (2020). Participatory performance in the secondary music classroom & the paradox of belonging. Music Education Research, 22(2), 229–241.
Bate, E. H. (2020). Justifying music in the National Curriculum: The habit concept & the question of social justice & academic rigour. British Journal of Music Education, 37(1), 3–15.
Giuseppe Gava
Fulford Junior Research FellowGiuseppe Pietro Gava joined Professor David Dupret’s Group as a joint D.Phil. student between Imperial College London (ICL) and the MRC Brain Networks Dynamic Unit (BNDU) in October 2016.
The collaboration was conceived under the ICL Neurotechnology CDT Program, and Giuseppe worked under the joint supervision of Dr Simon Schultz (ICL), Dr David Dupret (BNDU) and Prof William Wisden (ICL). Giuseppe was awarded his D.Phil. in 2021.
Giuseppe graduated in Biomedical Engineering at Imperial College London with a thesis on decoding locomotion kinematics from cererebellar neuronal activity, carried out under the supervision of Dr Simon Schultz. During the degree, he also collaborated with Dr Barry Seemungal at Charing Cross and St. Mary’s hospitals, London, to investigate vestibular spatial and temporal integration. During the same collaboration involving a project on the effect of dopamine on perception-motor coupling, Giuseppe was recipient of an award granted by the ‘Nuffield Foundation Royal Academy of Engineering Undergraduate Research Bursaries Programme’.
During the summer of 2015. Giuseppe joined Prof. Micera’s lab at EPFL, Switzerland, to collaborate on a project on the effect of handedness on muscle synergies. Giuseppe obtained and analysed motion tracking, EMG, force and torque data from human subjects. He also joined Team ICL in the Cybathlon Olympics for people with active prosthetics, having developed an eye-controlled wheelchair.
Giuseppe joined the Dupret Group as a Postdocoral Rrsearcher in 2021.
To view a full list of publications, visit https://www.mrcbndu.ox.ac.uk/publications?f%5B0%5D=unit_scientist%3ADr.%20Giuseppe%20Pietro%20Gava