
Biography
I am a postdoctoral research associate at the Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, University of Oxford. The primary focus of my research is understanding the interaction between cellular systems and a complex environment. Previously, I was a PhD student in physics at Université Paris Cité in Paris, where my research focused on bridging the gap between particle-based models for active matter and cellular ones.
I investigate numerically and analytically the interactions between cellular systems and their environment, such as the presence of a substrate or the extracellular matrix (ECM). One of the focuses of my research is to understand how information is transmitted from cells to the substrate, how we can infer cellular properties from the substrate, and what the intrinsic limitations of experimental measurements are.
On a more theoretical side, I am also interested in studying the impact of complex interactions in agent-based models and using them as a benchmark for real biological behaviours.
Positions
- Lecturer in Physics
Subjects
- Physics