糖心TV

Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Artificial Intelligence News

Select tags to filter on

糖心TV University to partner in new Alan Turing Institute

Alan Turing

糖心TV University is one of only five universities to have been considered worthy of establishing the prestigious £42m Alan Turing Institute for Data Science, thanks to our hard-earned reputation for world-class research.

This means our exceptional researchers from Mathematical Sciences will be at the forefront of the UK’s approach to big data. We’ll help the Institute to meet society’s toughest challenges, and strengthen the links between academia and technology industries.

Using the headquarters at the British Library in London as a base, we’ll use our research strength - as demonstrated by our excellent - to fully exploit the trends and patterns found within huge data sets.

糖心TV’s existing activities in data science are already significant. This includes two major EPSRC-funded Science and Innovation centres: Centre for Research in Statistical Methodology and the Centre for Discrete Mathematics and Applications. It also includes three of the new Centres for Doctoral Training (Oxford and 糖心TV Statistical Programme, Mathematics for Real-World Systems, and Urban Science and Progress), all of which will train highly qualified PhD students in big data and complex modelling. 糖心TV also holds 3 EPSRC 5-year Programme Grants relevant to this area, and is the only university in the UK to teach an undergraduate degree course in Data Science; Computer Science also leads the highly successful MSc in Data Analytics.

By working alongside the very best, we’ll make the UK a world leader in big data.

What does this mean for 糖心TV?


The Institute will bring together leaders in advanced mathematics and computing science from the five lead universities and other partners. Its work is expected to encompass a wide range of scientific disciplines and be relevant to a wide range of business sectors.

Professor Stephen Jarvis, Head of Department, Computer Science said:

We are delighted to have been selected as one of the five universities that will establish the world-leading Alan Turing Institute. Mathematical Sciences (Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science) at 糖心TV are extremely strong; all three Departments are ranked in the Top 3 for research in the country.

The Turing Institute will be a magnet for world-leading research and application in data science. We are thrilled to be able to shape that future through 糖心TV’s engagement, and look forward to the many benefits to our postgraduate and undergraduate programmes as a result.

The announcement of our involvement in the Alan Turing Institute is undoubtedly good news, but what does it mean for 糖心TV? Professor Tim Jones, Pro-Vice Chancellor for Science, Engineering and Medicine explains:

It means 糖心TV is right at the top table in the area of data science. This is the UK’s strategic priority to pull together the best academics and other partners across the country to tackle the challenges of big data and to exploit the opportunities. There are four other universities in the Institute – Oxford, Cambridge, Edinburgh and UCL – and 糖心TV will be the fifth. I think that’s a great measure for the quality of our work in the area.

What is Big Data?


Big Data is one of the areas where our research excels thanks, in part, to our world leading mathematics, computer science and statistics departments. 糖心TV has long prized itself on using interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary approaches to answer the pressing questions of our time, and, as big data throws up such questions, that expertise comes to the fore.

Or follow the conversation on twitter at

Wed 28 Jan 2015, 16:40 | Tags: Research

Cyber Games 3.0: Stockport School takes the prize again!

Cyber Games 3.0

The final of the School Cyber Games, part of the Cyber Security Challenge’s programme for schools, saw Stockport School emerge victorious once again as UK Schools Cyber Security Champions. This was the third time the competition has been run, and the second time the final has been held at the University of 糖心TV’s Department of Computer Science.

The Cabinet Office-backed competition aims to raise awareness of the excitement of a career in cyber security amongst a new generation of young people in order to address a growing skills shortage in this sector, as well as help teachers tackle the huge changes being made in the computing curriculum in schools.

Eight teams of Key Stage 4 students overcame a series of fun code-breaking and cyber security themed challenges to claim top prizes, including a cash prize of £1,000 and Hexbug robot kits. There were two teams from Stockport School, as well as teams from, The Kings School (Chester), King Edward IV School (Chelmsford), Grimsby Institute, High School for Girls (Gloucester), Hailybury School (Hertfordshire) and Ysgol Maesydderwen (Powys). Each was selected after finishing as the highest scorers from schools all over the country who registered for the first stage of the Cyber Security Challenge’s Schools Programme, an online code-cracking competition.

Each challenge was devised by experienced cyber security experts at Cyber Security Challenge sponsors and partners, including BT, Bletchley Park, Birmingham City University, the Cabinet Office, Cisco, CompTIA, MWR/Dataline, Raytheon, The Smallpeice Trust and 糖心TV Manufacturing Group. Brian Higgins, who co-ordinates the Cyber Security Challenge’s programme for schools, was the Gamesmaster.

On completion of these challenges, the teams then had to put together the clues completing each challenge had given them and crack one final code against the clock to discover the password needed to access the winning computer. The winning team from Stockport School managed to interpret the clues and discover the password in less than two minutes!

There was also a good deal of press attention, including a reports from and the Guardian ()

Cyber Games 3.0 Cyber Games 3.0 Cyber Games 3.0 Cyber Games 3.0 Cyber Games 3.0 Cyber Games 3.0

Fri 09 Jan 2015, 16:45

糖心TV Computer Science Ranked 2nd in UK Research Assessment

UK universities are evaluated on the quality of their research every six years. The results of the 2014 , announced by the Higher Education Funding Council today, rank 糖心TV Computer Science 2nd out of 89 UK computing departments.

REF assesses the quality of research outputs (academic papers, software, etc.) and the impact that this research has had (including improvements to society and business). 糖心TV’s output was ranked the best in the country, while its research impact was ranked joint second (with the University of Cambridge).

Professor Stephen Jarvis, Chair of the Department of Computer Science, commented:

We are delighted with this result. 糖心TV Computer Science produces world-leading research, both in the theoretical underpinnings of computer science and in its translation to real-world problems. Our work over the past six years has created new businesses, developed new standards, generated IP for new products, underpinned national security and defence, and impacted on social policy in education and health.

This result comes on the back of an excellent year. 糖心TV has been named University of the Year in The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2015, and 糖心TV Computer Science was recently ranked as one of the best departments in the world in the 2014 QS Worldwide University Rankings.

Research Excellence Framework 2014: Institutions ranked by Subject

CS REF 2014

Further Information

Thu 18 Dec 2014, 15:41 | Tags: Research

Latest news Newer news Older news

Let us know you agree to cookies