[Full tuition fees covered at UK (£10,470) and Overseas (£34,700) rates for 2026–27. Stipend of approximately £22,780 (2024–25 rate) for the first year and at least this amount for subsequent years.] This 3.5-year D.Phil. studentship at the University of Oxford’s Podium Institute for Sports Medicine and Technology offers a unique opportunity to contribute to cutting-edge research focused on injury prevention in youth, community, and female athletes. Unlike traditional sports injury research that centers on treatment, the Podium Institute prioritizes safety and prevention, developing and validating technologies to monitor and analyze individual risk factors for sports injuries. The Institute is based within the Department of Engineering Science’s Institute of Biomedical Engineering and collaborates with experts from both Engineering Science and the Medical Sciences Division. The studentship is open to both UK and overseas students, with full tuition fees covered at UK (£10,470) and Overseas (£34,700) rates for 2026–27, and a generous stipend of approximately £22,780 (2024–25 rate) for the first year and at least this amount for subsequent years. Research themes span a wide range of interdisciplinary topics, including multiphysics and data-driven constitutive modeling of traumatic brain injury, physics-informed image registration, experimental characterization of soft biological materials, computer-vision-based techniques for injury detection and prevention, robotic simulators for PPE testing, development of functional materials and data-driven optimization for impact absorption, wearable assistive robotics, haptic interfaces in virtual reality, AI coaching for skill learning, wearable and implantable technologies for cardiac health, biochemical and physical markers for overuse injury prevention, sleep monitoring for athlete recovery, machine learning for imaging markers of anxiety and pain, and advanced MRI methods for brain injury assessment. Applicants should possess a first-class or strong upper second-class undergraduate degree in engineering, physical sciences, or medical sciences, excellent English communication skills, and a strong interest in sports medicine and technology. Desirable qualifications include research experience in sports medicine and technology and programming skills in MATLAB or Python. The application process requires a formal submission through the University of Oxford’s graduate admissions portal, including a research proposal aligned with the priority research areas. Informal enquiries can be made to Elizabeth Hempstead at
[email protected]. The studentship provides an outstanding environment for interdisciplinary research, mentorship from leading academics, and the opportunity to make a significant impact on athlete health and safety.