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Clear filters to view everything →Volunteer researcher at the Existential Risk Observatory and postdoctoral mathematician at Utrecht University, interested in AI as well as science and education policy.
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Dr. Merve Ayyüce Kızrak is an AI specialist with over 15 years of experience in artificial intelligence, specialising in computer vision, AI governance, and AI safety. She holds a PhD in Electronics and Communication Engineering from Yıldız Technical University and a master’s in Economics and FinTech from Bahçeşehir University, and works as an AI Specialist in the Presidency of Türkiye’s Digital Transformation Office, where she leads data‑governance projects and contributes to the national AI strategy.
Zohreh Shams is a research manager at MATS London and an affiliated lecturer at the University of Cambridge whose research focuses on interpretability and its applications to knowledge discovery. The MATS London profile notes that she previously served as CSO at Leap Laboratories, a spin-out of MATS, where she led research.
Boston Nyer is a co‑founder and fractional COO of Juniper Ventures and an operator focused on AI and global health, with prior leadership roles at FAR.AI, GiveWell, Equalize Health, Momentum and clean‑cookstove company BURN Manufacturing.
David Williams-King is an AI safety researcher and communicator based in Montreal, Canada. He holds a PhD in Computer Science (Systems & Security) from Columbia University (2014-2020), where his research focused on binary security and code randomization. After graduating, he co-founded and served as CTO of Elpha Secure, a cybersecurity insurance startup, leading a team of 15-20 engineers. He transitioned into AI safety work and currently conducts research at Mila (Quebec AI Institute) as part of Yoshua Bengio's Safe AI for Humanity initiative, and serves as a Research Manager for Technical AI Safety at ERA Cambridge (ERA Fellowship). He also works with LawZero, an AI safety organization. His research examines LLM safety, jailbreaks, and guardrails, drawing lessons from cybersecurity history, and he has co-authored papers including "Can Safety Fine-Tuning Be More Principled? Lessons Learned from Cybersecurity" and "Superintelligent Agents Pose Catastrophic Risks: Can Scientist AI Offer a Safer Path?" with Yoshua Bengio and others. He also runs a YouTube channel with over 30,000 subscribers focused on AI safety and how AI will impact society, and received an LTFF grant to support this work.
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Pablo Stafforini is the director of Tlön, a nonprofit organization that translates content related to effective altruism, existential risk, and global priorities research into multiple languages. He has been involved in the effective altruism community since its early days, having met Will MacAskill and Toby Ord as a philosophy student at the University of Oxford, where he studied under Krister Bykvist. He served as a research assistant to Will MacAskill and contributed substantially to the background research for the book Doing Good Better. He created, edited, and wrote most of the content for the Effective Altruism Wiki, which connects directly to his grant for writing preliminary content for an encyclopedia of effective altruism. He is also a member of the Samotsvety superforecasting group and co-hosts the Spanish-language podcast La bisagra de la historia. After years of nomadic living, he returned to his native Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Roman Leventov is an independent researcher, blogger, and philosopher focused on intelligence and agency, with particular emphasis on Active Inference, AI alignment, ethics, and collective decision-making systems. He holds a technical background in software engineering from Bauman Moscow State Technical University in Moscow and has contributed to high-performance open-source systems including Apache Druid. He has worked as a software engineer at companies including Metamarkets and Pocketdata.AI, and runs the "Engineering Ideas" Substack covering systems engineering, AI, and philosophy of agency. His AI safety research examines goal misgeneralisation through the lens of Active Inference and the development of collective sense-making architectures. He is a founding member of the Gaia Consortium, a project aimed at building a global decentralized system for collective decision-making and civilisational intelligence. He received a grant from the Long-Term Future Fund to support six months of independent research on goal misgeneralisation from an Active Inference perspective and collective decision-making systems.
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Part-time Program Manager at the Berkeley Existential Risk Initiative since July 2025, overseeing new program development. He is a consultant, program manager, and community builder with a background in workforce and economic development, and a trained engineer who has worked in the aerospace and manufacturing industry.
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Nikos Bosse is a research engineer at FutureSearch. He holds a PhD in Statistics from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and an MD from the University of Göttingen, and previously worked on research strategy at Metaculus while completing his medical and doctoral training in infectious disease forecasting and forecast evaluation.
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Yordanos Asmare is the Head of People at FAR.AI, where she leads and manages people operations, including recruitment, culture, and employee experience. She has deep experience building and scaling organizations, running operations, and developing communities and partnerships, and she specializes in creating high‑performance, inclusive, and impactful teams and cultures. Yordanos holds a BA in English Literature with a focus in Sociology of Education from Stanford University.
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Zach Graves is president and CEO of the Foundation for American Innovation and an ex officio member of its board. Previously head of policy at FAI, he has led work at the intersection of technology and governance, after earlier roles directing technology and innovation policy at the R Street Institute and working at the Cato Institute and America’s Future Foundation.
David Chanin is a PhD student in the UCL Centre for Doctoral Training in Foundational AI, where he studies mechanistic interpretability and knowledge representation in large language models. He is a researcher at Decode Research and a maintainer of the SAELens library, contributing to open-source tooling for training sparse autoencoders and analyzing neural network internals.
Research scientist in the Algorithmic Alignment Group at MIT CSAIL working with Prof. Dylan Hadfield-Menell, broadly interested in ensuring that algorithms and systems behave correctly, safely, and in line with their intended real-world purpose.
Tessa Alexanian is a biosecurity professional and engineer focused on steering biotechnology toward positive futures. She is the Technical Lead for the Common Mechanism at IBBIS (International Biosecurity and Biosafety Initiative for Science), an international baseline for nucleic acid synthesis screening aimed at preventing misuse of synthetic biology. She holds an engineering degree from the University of Waterloo and spent four years as a lab automation engineer at Zymergen before serving two years as Safety and Security officer for the iGEM Competition. She has been organizing biosecurity events in the San Francisco Bay Area since 2018, founding the East Bay Biosecurity Group and co-instigating the Catalyst biosecurity summit, which brought together Bay Area biotech industry professionals, DIY biologists, and biosecurity researchers. She is a 2023 Council on Strategic Risks Fellow for Ending Bioweapons, a 2022 ELBI fellow, and a 2020 Foresight Fellow. She has collaborated with Open Philanthropy, NTI|bio, RAND, and the Federation of American Scientists, and co-authors the GCBR Organization Updates newsletter covering global catastrophic biological risk.
Rohinton P. Medhora is a CIGI distinguished fellow and professor of practice at McGill University’s Institute for the Study of International Development; he served as CIGI’s president from 2012 to 2022 and previously was vice president of programs at Canada’s International Development Research Centre, with expertise in international economic relations, innovation policy and development economics.
Seán Ó hÉigeartaigh is Director of the AI: Futures and Responsibility Programme at the University of Cambridge, a joint programme between the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk and the Centre for the Future of Intelligence. His work focuses on foresight and governance of frontier and general-purpose AI, including the geopolitical implications of advanced AI, and he has previously served as founding Executive Director of the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk and helped establish the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence.
Founding director of the Institute for Law & AI and Assistant Professor of Law and AI at the University of Cambridge. His research focuses on the law and policy of general‑purpose and advanced AI systems, and he has served as a legal advisor to the EU GPAI Code of Practice.
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Project Specialist at Impact Academy who graduated with an integrated Master’s in Development Studies from the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras, previously worked as a public policy researcher at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, and has written on development issues for several publications.
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Kadri Reis is a biosecurity researcher at the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt (PRIF), where she works in the Research Group Biological and Chemical Disarmament and Security and contributes to the Cluster for Natural and Technical Science Arms Control Research (CNTR). Her research focuses on the nonproliferation and disarmament of chemical and biological weapons, dual-use risks in biotechnology, the convergence of AI and biosecurity, and DNA sequencing and synthesis in biosecurity contexts. She holds a PhD in Biomedical Sciences from Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona (2016), an MSc in Molecular Bioengineering from TU Dresden, and a BSc in Genetics from the University of Tartu. She also pursued an MA in Political Science at Tallinn University. Her publications include work on oncolytic virus engineering dual-use risks, DNA sequencing and screening in biosecurity, and implications of technological advancements for biosecurity, as well as co-editing a 2025 CNTR volume on AI in global security. She attended the Biological Weapons Convention Ninth Review Conference in Geneva in late 2022.
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Nathan Sherburn is a software engineer and entrepreneur who leads Good Ancestors’ technical research projects, including its Legal Zero-Days work, drawing on experience building AI-assisted products and tools.
Katja Grace is a researcher focused on understanding the future impacts of artificial intelligence. She co-founded AI Impacts, a long-running project examining empirical and conceptual questions relevant to AI forecasting and decision-making, and leads its research on technological trajectories, expert prediction, model scaling and related topics.
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Logan McNichols received a $3,200 grant from the Long-Term Future Fund in December 2021 to fund participants in testing a forecasting training program. The program's core approach involves backcasting — simulating normal forecasting on questions that have already been resolved — to enable rapid feedback that is otherwise unavailable in standard forecasting, where resolution can take months or years. The program used teams of two (an information gatherer and a forecaster) to address the practical challenges of backcasting exercises. The LTFF fund managers noted the small size of the grant meant they did not evaluate it in depth, but found the basic idea reasonable and potentially useful for people seeking to improve their forecasting skills. No further public information about Logan McNichols' background, affiliation, or other work is available.
Arthur Grimonpont is Head of Advocacy at CeSIA, where he represents the organisation in parliamentary hearings and public debates on systemic AI risks. He is also an essayist and advisor on AI at Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and author of the book “Algocratie”, which examines how artificial intelligence shapes the information ecosystem.
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Lewis Hammond is a DPhil candidate in computer science at the University of Oxford and Research Director at the Cooperative AI Foundation. His doctoral research, supervised by Alessandro Abate, Julian Gutierrez, and Michael Wooldridge, focuses on safety and cooperation in multi-agent systems, motivated by the goal of ensuring AI and other powerful technologies are developed and governed safely and democratically. He holds a BSc in mathematics and philosophy from the University of Warwick and an MSc in artificial intelligence from the University of Edinburgh. His key research areas span game theory, formal methods, machine learning, cooperative AI, causal reasoning in games, and scalable oversight; notably, his ICLR 2025 paper on neural interactive proofs introduces a framework for how a computationally bounded verifier can learn to interact with powerful but untrusted provers to solve tasks, directly addressing the scalable oversight problem. He is also affiliated with the Centre for the Governance of AI, is a Pathways to AI Policy Fellow at the Wilson Center, and was previously a DPhil Affiliate at the Future of Humanity Institute. His scalable oversight experiments received funding from the Long-Term Future Fund and OpenAI.
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Geoffrey D. Dabelko, PhD, is Senior Advisor and former director of the Wilson Center’s Environmental Change and Security Program, a professor and associate dean at Ohio University’s George V. Voinovich School of Leadership and Public Affairs, and an associate senior fellow with the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute’s Environment of Peace Initiative.