Professor Ilina Singh
Team Members
Neuroscience Ethics and Society Team (NEUROSEC)
We are a uniquely interdisciplinary team, working at the intersection of neuroscience, mental health, bioethics and participatory co-design.
STUDENTS:
Sarah Chen, Rhodes Scholar DPhil Student
Oxford Wellcome Platform for Transformative Inclusive Bioethics (ANTITHESES)
Dr David Lyreskog, Postdoctoral Researcher
Dr Kathryn Francis, Postdoctoral Researcher
Dr Hazem Jonny, EC Postdoctoral Researcher
Dr Edmond Awad, Senior Researcher; joint post with Oxford Uehiro Centre
Dr Madeleine Reineke, Postdoctoral Researcher, joint with Oxford Uehiro Centre
William Hohnen-Ford, Research Assistant
Oxford Human-Nature Health Research Platform
Dr Katrin Wilhelm, Senior Researcher, Psychiatry & Geography
Dr Lalitha Iyadurai, Senior Researcher, Psychiatry
Dr Delia Ciobotaru, Postdoctoral Researcher, Psychiatry
Dr Wendee Zhang, Senior Researcher, Geography
Dr Laurence Cannings, Senior Researcher, Geography
Dr Kiera Chapman, Senior Researcher, English
Emma Fry, Research Assistant
Jessica Frater, Project Coordinator
Wellcome Trust Surprises Project
Dr Lucienne Spencer, Postdoctoral Researcher
Thrisha Krishnakumar, Research Assistant
NeurOx Young People's Advisory Group
Communications and Outreach
Georgie Kenny: Georgina.kenny@psych.ox.ac.uk
Ilina Singh
NEUROSCIENCE, ETHICS AND SOCIETY THEME LEAD
Professor of Neuroscience & Society
- Co-Director: Oxford Wellcome Platform in Transformative, Inclusive Bioethics (ANTITHESES)
- Principal Investigator: Oxford Human-Nature Health Research Platform
- Distinguished Research Fellow: Uehiro Oxford Institute
Research on the social and ethical dimensions of research and innovation in neuroscience and psychiatry
PERSONAL OVERVIEW
I hold a doctorate in human development and psychology from Harvard University, and over the past decade I have added to these foundations through extensive work in bioethics, methods innovation, and sociology. I bring this interdisciplinary perspective to my current research through an approach known as empirical ethics. At present, my team's major research projects encompass: nature-based interventions for flourishing and wellbeing; AI and digital mental health ethics; and global mental health ethics.
Much of my work reflects a longstanding commitment to bringing the first-person experiences of children and young people into ethical evaluation, clinical decision-making and policy-making. My team has pioneered participatory methods for co-design and co-production with young people, qualitative and quantitative methods, mobile technologies and digital games.
Current Projects
I am a co-principal investigator for the Oxford Wellcome Platform for Transformative Inclusive Bioethics (ANTITHESES), where I lead the Design Bioethics Lab on the neuroethics of new forms of collective and collaborative decision-making, including swarm and hive minds, brain-computer interfaces, and novel AI technologies. My team also contributes to work on global genomic ethics through our global mental health ethics programme. We are funded for various projects through a partnership with the Stanley Centre, Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT; British Academy; Global Challenges Research Fund, Africa-Oxford Initiative, and others.
I lead the Oxford Human-Nature Health Research Platform. We will evaluate practical solutions such as community horticulture projects and other nature engagement tools including apps, measuring their outcomes for mental health and wellbeing. The team will then examine ways to scale up effective interventions so that more people can benefit, regardless of their current mental health status or proximity to nature. Policy recommendations and toolkits will also be developed to help guide future initiatives in this area.
Further work on nature-based programmes for mental health and wellbeing in UK schools is supported by a NERC Agile Initiative grant in partnership with the UK Department for Education: AGILE: Is Nature a Policy Solution to Mental Health in Schools?
I am a co-investigator on a Wellcome Discovery Award (PI Prof Argyris Stringaris, UCL) where my role is to investigate the ethics of 'surprises' (or expectancy violations) in therapies targeting severe social anxiety. Wellcome Trust Surprises Project
Past projects include:
NIHR Flourishing and Wellbeing Theme Lead.
A Senior Investigator Award from the Wellcome Trust for a project entitled: Becoming Good: Early Intervention and Moral Development in Child Psychiatry, 2015-2020. This project follows on from a Wellcome Trust University Award for VOICES: Voices on Identity, Childhood, Ethics & Stimulants: Children join the debate. We have added significantly to innovative methods in working with young people. A Wellcome Trust Enrichment Award enabled us to create a bioethics game on mental health digital phenotyping: www.tracingtomorrow.org
I led the UK Ethics Accelerator for Pandemic Emergencies, funded by the UKRI Covid-19 Rapid Response Call, involving 5 UK institutions and 9 leading UK bioethicists as Co-Directors, along with 6 postdoctoral fellows and the Nuffield Council of Bioethics as a key partner. A project funded by the Duke of Westminster Foundation for a trial of a peer-support intervention for mental health and wellbeing, aimed at the challenges faced by adolescents during the epidemic crisis.
Recent publications
The role of Hybrid Green Spaces in secure psychiatric care
Journal article
Wilhelm K. et al, (2026), Wellbeing Space and Society, 10
Blurring Boundaries: The Role of Hybrid Green Spaces in Secure Psychiatric Care
Preprint
Wilhelm K. et al, (2026)
RESEARCH, TRAINING AND EDUCATION OPPORTUNITIES
POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH
All postdoctoral projects need to be fully funded, either through advertised posts, or through external fellowships. I am only able to support external postdocs whose projects are closely linked to our active funded research.
SUPERVISION
As of 2026, I have limited space for MSc and DPhil (PhD) supervision, but I welcome proposals. Please send a cv and a draft proposal including background, research questions/hypotheses, methodology, proposed analysis plan, and anticipated outcomes. Please also include a writing sample (preferably a first authored publication). All projects will need to have an empirical basis (we use both quantitative and qualitative methods). DPhil candidates are expected to have a good background in bioethics or critical social science. Approaches from scientists and medics are very welcome.
- Ethical and/or social dimensions of child mental health, particularly ADHD, Autism and Psychosis
- Social and/or ethical dimensions of neuroscience technology innovation, including AI
- Patient engagement/involvement in the context of science, industry, health, society, including co-design and co-production methodologies
- Global mental health ethics
