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Naomi Woo

  • Alumni
  • Canada
  • 2013 MPhil Music Studies
    2014 PhD Music
  • Clare College
Naomi Woo

Naomi Woo

  • Alumni
  • Canada
  • 2013 MPhil Music Studies
    2014 PhD Music
  • Clare College

I am a pianist, harpsichordist and conductor studying Performance Studies in the Music Faculty at Cambridge. My current and former research interests have included translation studies, musical transcription, 20th-century French music, musical memory, time, mathematics, and the mind. As a performer, my interests run the gamut from historically informed performance, to experimental/multidisciplinary concert experiences, to promoting works by female composers. I hold a BA in Mathematics&Philosophy from Yale College, and a MMus in Piano Performance from the Yale School of Music. www.naomiwoo.com

Alex Wood

  • Alumni
  • Australia
  • 2015 PhD Medicine
  • Emmanuel College
Alex Wood

Alex Wood

  • Alumni
  • Australia
  • 2015 PhD Medicine
  • Emmanuel College

Previous Education

University of Western Australia

Melanie Wood

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2003 CASM Mathematics
  • Trinity College
Melanie Wood

Melanie Wood

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2003 CASM Mathematics
  • Trinity College

Andrew Woods

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2007 PhD Politics
  • Sidney Sussex College
Andrew Woods

Andrew Woods

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2007 PhD Politics
  • Sidney Sussex College

My work focuses on the role of culture and media, broadly defined, in human rights advocacy. I'm also interested in information warfare, and the ways in which technology is changing international affairs.

Jordan Woods

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2010 PhD Criminology
  • King's College
Jordan Woods

Jordan Woods

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2010 PhD Criminology
  • King's College

I grew up in the snowy Catskill Mountains of Upstate New York. At Cambridge, my PhD research will explore how the British police handle hate crimes, with an emphasis on hate crimes against lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people. I intend on using my research to improve hate crime policing within North America and the European Union. In 2012-13, I will take a year off from Cambridge to brush up on my country-western dance moves in Texas and serve as a judicial clerk on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. After graduate school, I hope to enter academia and be involved in making public policy on criminal sentencing, criminal procedure, and law enforcement related issues.

Shane Woods

  • Alumni
  • Canada
  • 2004 PhD Genetics
  • Hughes Hall
Shane Woods

Shane Woods

  • Alumni
  • Canada
  • 2004 PhD Genetics
  • Hughes Hall

I have a degree in biochemistry but have spent most of my research hours studying the cytoskeleton and searching for drugable targets of small molecules. I plan to complete my doctorial studies investigating duplicate genes on a functional level and deciphering their evolutionary role. Besides research, I'm interested in the relationship between science-business and the way in which this relationship influences the economy.

Christina Woolner

  • Alumni
  • Canada
  • 2013 MPhil Social Anthropology
  • Lucy Cavendish College
Christina Woolner

Christina Woolner

  • Alumni
  • Canada
  • 2013 MPhil Social Anthropology
  • Lucy Cavendish College

Christina Woolner is a Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow, working on a project titled “The poetry of politics and politics of poetry: transforming political subjectivities in Somaliland.”

Dr. Woolner recently completed her PhD in Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge, where she wrote a dissertation titled The Labour of Love Songs: Voicing Intimacy in Somaliland. Based on long-term ethnographic fieldwork with poets, musicians, singers, music-lovers and love-suffering audiences in Hargeysa, her dissertation explores how love songs distill, perform and open space for intimacy – in the way they are produced, circulated, debated, listened to, performed, and put to work in public and private settings. Her dissertation paid particular attention to the way that different ideas about the voice, and different practices of voicing intersect to enable intimate relationships and subjectivities.

Dr. Woolner’s current research project takes her interest in voice and voicing into the realm of Somali political orature. In what is often called a “nation of poets”, she will be focusing on a recent poetry debate chain known as “miimley” – a series of poems that criticized and defended Somaliland’s government – to explore gendered and generational shifts in ideas of “voice”, subjectivity and political belonging.

Dr. Woolner’s current research builds on a long-held interest in the role of storytelling and voice in war and peacebuilding processes. She has worked as an instructor/lecturer in peace and conflict studies at universities in Canada and Somaliland, as well as a researcher at Project Ploughshares, a Canadian NGO that monitors armed conflict and the armaments industry. She holds a BA in Global Studies and Religion & Culture (Wilfrid Laurier University), an MA in International Peace Studies (University of Notre Dame), and an MPhil in Social Anthropology (Cambridge).

Joseph Wu

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2016 PhD History + Philosophy of Sci
  • King's College
Joseph Wu

Joseph Wu

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2016 PhD History + Philosophy of Sci
  • King's College

I grew up in southern California and attended Duke for my undergraduate studies. I started out in biology, researching the genetic regulation of skin cancer and spending my summers with kids affected by cancer. I transitioned to philosophy out of a desire to explore, not just the functioning of disease, but also the nature of our attempts to mitigate it. My PhD examined one such attempt, the early detection of cancer though screening, an issue that cuts across public health ethics, political philosophy, and philosophy of medicine. We can ask of screening: what are the benefits and harms, and how can we distribute them justly throughout the population? What sorts of ethical obligations shape how we communicate about cancer? What are the ultimate aims and limits of medicine? Answering these questions is central to developing ethically sound and effective health policies. Apart from research, I competed for the Cambridge University water polo team, and co-captained the team in 2016-2017. After Cambridge, I attended medical school at Brown, and am currently a Psychiatry resident at the Brigham and Women's Hospital / Harvard Medical School program.

Previous Education

Duke University
University of Cambridge

Ke Wu

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2012 MPhil Education (Thematic route)
  • St John's College
Ke Wu

Ke Wu

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2012 MPhil Education (Thematic route)
  • St John's College

Previous Education

Arizona State University B.S. in Biochemistry 2010

Catherine Xie

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2013 MPhil Clinical Science
  • Trinity College
Catherine Xie

Catherine Xie

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2013 MPhil Clinical Science
  • Trinity College

Growing up, I not only gained a deep appreciation for cultural diversity through living in four different countries (China, Australia, Canada, and the USA), but also became motivated by my fascination with the study of life to discover new knowledge. My innate curiosity and passion for scientific research led me to pursue a B.S. in Bioengineering at the California Institute of Technology, where I gained cutting-edge insights into complex modern diseases and pursued extensive investigations to find therapies for leukemia and diabetes. At Cambridge, my MPhil in Clinical Science (Translational Medicine and Therapeutics) will provide me with valuable knowledge and training in applying knowledge of disease mechanisms to guide powerful therapeutic drug development. I will gain an ideal foundation to become a physician-scientist, translating my research findings into more effective healthcare and providing people with the knowledge and treatments to battle their diseases.

Surgeon Xolo

  • Alumni
  • South Africa
  • 2007 MPhil Education (Thematic route)
    2008 PhD Education
  • Hughes Hall
Surgeon Xolo

Surgeon Xolo

  • Alumni
  • South Africa
  • 2007 MPhil Education (Thematic route)
    2008 PhD Education
  • Hughes Hall

The Gates Cambridge Scholarship enables me to pursue my intellectual aspirations at an internationally renowned university. In Cambridge I have an opportunity to meet leading scholars, from all over the world. This will allow me to explore global trends in mathematics education with a critical reflection on how the best of these may be incorporated into curriculum practice in South Africa. In my PhD study I seek to investigate South African teachers’ practice in terms of the opportunities offered for the South African students to learn mathematics.

Donari Yahzid

  • Scholar-elect
  • United States, Jamaica
  • 2025 PhD Development Studies
  • St Edmund's College
Donari Yahzid

Donari Yahzid

  • Scholar-elect
  • United States, Jamaica
  • 2025 PhD Development Studies
  • St Edmund's College

Growing up between Jamaica, Ghana, and the United States, I have learned to understand land as a resource beyond territory; it is the essence of one's identity, culture and freedom. As a result, I have been dedicated to researching the relationship between land rights, global institutions, and the survival of humankind. My research on land rights began at Mount Holyoke College when I studied abroad in Samoa, researching the relationship between development agencies and Samoan customary land tenure. After graduation, I was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to return to Samoa to continue my research. Thereafter, I attended the University of Cambridge's MPhil in Development Studies programme, where I interrogated the development system and its capacity to adhere to the bespoke needs of traditional communities. For the past year, I have been residing in Brazil researching and engaging with Indigenous and Quilombo communities fighting to obtain their land rights. As a PhD student and Gates Scholar, I will continue my work with Afro-Indigenous communities in Brazil to combat the violence and injustice embedded in land alienation.

Previous Education

Mount Holyoke College Anthropology and Politics
University of Cambridge Development Studies

Tatyana Yakovleva

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2003 PhD Biological Science
  • Churchill College
Tatyana Yakovleva

Tatyana Yakovleva

  • Alumni
  • United States
  • 2003 PhD Biological Science
  • Churchill College

I am grateful to the Gates Trust for their support in this difficult but exciting journey. In my Ph.D. project in Biochemistry I explored the structure and function of Methy-CpG binding protein 2 (MeCP2) and it's domains. Currently, I live in Philadelphia and work as a medical communications scientist at Synchrogenix Information Strategies Inc.

Joshua Yang

  • Scholar-elect
  • United States
  • 2025 MPhil Modern South Asian Studies
  • Hughes Hall
Joshua Yang

Joshua Yang

  • Scholar-elect
  • United States
  • 2025 MPhil Modern South Asian Studies
  • Hughes Hall

I am interested in questions of belonging and marginality, particularly with regards to those who exist within, and help define, the periphery of the nation-state. My current research examines the long-term sociopolitical impacts of Hindu mob violence targeting Muslims in India, which implicates questions of Indian secularism, citizenship, and national identity. I studied moral and legal philosophy at Princeton University; my senior thesis examined the nature of our obligations to obey the law. Throughout my undergraduate years, I also worked as a freelance reporter across West, South, and East Asia, covering everything from the aftermath of the Hong Kong pro-democracy movement to the Armenian diaspora in East Jerusalem. At the University of Cambridge, I hope to draw upon my experiences as both a philosophy student and a journalist to inform my historical and ethnographic research in the MPhil program in Modern South Asian Studies.

Previous Education

Princeton University Philosophy

Ju-Huei Yang

  • Alumni
  • Taiwan
  • 2001 PhD Economics
  • Trinity College
Ju-Huei Yang

Ju-Huei Yang

  • Alumni
  • Taiwan
  • 2001 PhD Economics
  • Trinity College

Great minds such as Keynes brought me to this stimulating environment to encounter a unique mixture of culture and science heritage. The Cambridge experience has made my past few years memorable and has enriched my preparation for the challenges ahead.

Ming Yang

  • Scholar
  • China
  • 2022 PhD Applied Maths and Theoretical Physics
  • Trinity College
Ming Yang

Ming Yang

  • Scholar
  • China
  • 2022 PhD Applied Maths and Theoretical Physics
  • Trinity College

Looking back, my immense curiosity about fundamental science started in my childhood. Consciously or not, it always fascinated me how rich structures lie beneath the very simple first principles. During my undergraduate years at Cambridge in Mathematics, I explored theoretical physics through courses and summer research and discovered my passion for high-energy physics. Looking ahead to my PhD, I will be supervised by Professor Sean Hartnoll and will focus on the emergence of spacetime using models in matrix quantum mechanics, which is a subject inspired by condensed matter physics and closely related to string theory. It has the potential of unifying gravity with quantum field theory and solving some of the biggest mysteries in high-energy physics, e.g. the black hole microstates problem. The aim is to use techniques in Quantum Information and Random Matrix Theory to develop a probe to understand such strongly interacting systems. Meanwhile, I will commit myself to widespread fundamental sciences and let more people enjoy the beauty and elegance of maths and physics. It is my great honour to join the Gates Cambridge community and strive together with the future leaders of our generation to make our world a better place.

Previous Education

University of Cambridge Mathematics 2022

Zhen Yang

  • Alumni
  • China
  • 2010 PhD Engineering
  • Trinity College
Zhen Yang

Zhen Yang

  • Alumni
  • China
  • 2010 PhD Engineering
  • Trinity College

Have graduated from Electrical, Electronic and Computer Science Department, the University of Birmingham as a top student, I am now a PhD student in the field of Photonic Systems. Before this, I did 2 years study at Fudan University, Shanghai, with a top result in the major of Optical Science and Technology. I am interested in the project on superradiant emission from a semiconductor structure, which would be a promising technology for laser development.

Zhongqiang Yang

  • Alumni
  • China
  • 2003 PhD Chemistry
  • Gonville and Caius College
Zhongqiang Yang

Zhongqiang Yang

  • Alumni
  • China
  • 2003 PhD Chemistry
  • Gonville and Caius College

I received BEngr (2000) and MSc (2003) from Heilongjiang University and Jilin University in China, respectively. In 2003, I obtained Gates Cambridge Trust and Overseas Research Studentship and pursued PhD at the University of Cambridge, working with Prof. Wilhelm T. S. Huck at Melville Laboratory for Polymer Synthesis, Chemistry Department. In 2007, I went to the University of Wisconsin-Madison in USA, carrying out post-doctoral work with Prof. Nicholas L. Abbott at Chemical & Biological Engineering Department. In 2010, I joined Chemistry Department at Tsinghua University as Associate Professor. My research interests include soft matter and interfaces.