An artificial intelligence expert has been appointed the new executive chair of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).
Charlotte Deane, who is currently professor of structural bioinformatics at the University of Oxford and chief AI officer at Exscientia, an AI-driven pharmaceutical company, will take up the new role in January, it wasĀ .
Professor Deane was previously the EPSRCās deputy executive chair during the Covid pandemic and acted as UK Research and Innovationās (UKRI) Covid-19 response director. She received an MBE in the 2022 Birthday Honours for services to coronavirus research.
Announcing her appointment, the UKās science secretary, Michelle Donelan, said: āProfessor Deaneās return to the council as its executive chair is excellent news for the sector, bringing a strong record in driving pioneering research in business and academia and having spearheaded UKRIās Covid response at a vital time for the UK.
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āFrom digital technologies to clean energy, manufacturing to mathematics, advanced materials to chemistry, EPSRC-led discoveries impact on all our lives and I look forward to working with Professor Deane to take forward the innovation that benefits the whole country.ā
Professor Deane succeeds Miles Padgett, who has been EPSRCās interim executive chair since June, when Dame Lynne Gladden stepped down after five years in the role.
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She will lead one of the UKās largest research councils, which had a research and infrastructure budget of Ā£817 million in 2023-24. It also spent about Ā£250 million on PhD studentships and fellowships in 2022-23 ā more than a third of all UKRIās Collective Talent Funding.
UKRIās director, Dame Ottoline Leyser, said Professor Deane ābrings with her a wealth of experience and an impressive track record as a leader in both academia and businessā.
āShe will take on the leadership of EPSRC at a critical and exciting time, with the transformative potential for our economy, public services and society from new technologies such as AI and quantum,ā said Dame Ottoline.
Professor Deane said she was āexcitedā about her new role and it would be a āreal privilege to lead the EPSRC at such an important timeā.
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āThe opportunities for EPSRC research have never been greater, from machine learning methodologies, whichĀ touch practically every aspect of the economy and society, to quantum computing and advanced materials to the growing understanding of the importance of EPS techniques for solving challenges, from climate change to future pandemics,ā said Professor Deane.
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