My research at the Sanger Institute is on evolutionary genomics of parasites, and particularly on parasites that cause neglected tropical diseases. This work covers a wide range of organisms from parasitic protozoa such as Leishmania to complex multicellular helminths, but they are united by a strong emphasis on either comparative or population genomic questions.
I studied biology at Oxford, and then did a PhD on gene family evolution with Rod Page at the University of Glasgow, followed by post-docs at the Natural History Museum in London and at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth, working on various topics in phylogenetics and molecular evolution. I was subsequently an RCUK Fellow at Queen Mary, University of London for three years before joining the parasite genomics group in 2010.