Research Economics of AI · labour, adoption, and policy
My research sits at the intersection of applied microeconomics and frontier technology. I'm interested in how AI is actually adopted — by whom, with what skills, under what constraints — and how those adoption patterns shape the distribution of gains from the technology.
Working papers & projects
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In progress
Missing Voices in AI: a qualitative study of women's adoption of generative AI
Co-authored with two DPhil students at Oxford. We analyse 300+ open-ended survey responses to understand the gendered frictions in AI adoption — trust, permission, and perceived legitimacy — and what they imply for measured productivity gaps.
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Predoctoral
Economics of AI and robotics — EIT Oxford
Contributing to the Economics team's work programme on how advanced AI and robotics reshape labour markets, firm behaviour and long-run growth.
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Past
Longevity and population ageing — EIT Oxford
Earlier predoctoral work on the macroeconomics of longer lifespans and healthspan extension.
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Industry
Economic impact of frontier technology — London Economics
Consulting-style research on space and deep-tech firms: market structure, spillovers, and the public-return case for frontier R&D.
Education
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MPhil, University of Oxford
In progress.
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BSc Econometrics and Mathematical Economics, LSE
Graduated 2025.
Technical
Python (8+ years), Stata, R, MATLAB. Earlier in school I competed in robotics at national level for the UK.