Congratulations to Alain who has been awarded the 2025 LMS/IMA David Crighton Medal. The award recognises his deep and influential mathematical insights into mechanical and biological processes and materials, his support of early career mathematicians, and his contributions to the public understanding of mathematics and its applications.
Congratulations to Oxford Mathematician Alain Goriely who has been awarded the 2025 LMS/IMA David Crighton Medal. The award recognises his deep and influential mathematical insights into mechanical and biological processes and materials, his support of early career mathematicians, and his contributions to the public understanding of mathematics and its applications.
When AI Goes Awry
Abstract
Over the last decade, adversarial attack algorithms have revealed instabilities in artificial intelligence (AI) tools. These algorithms raise issues regarding safety, reliability and interpretability; especially in high risk settings. Mathematics is at the heart of this landscape, with ideas from numerical analysis, optimization, and high dimensional stochastic analysis playing key roles. From a practical perspective, there has been a war of escalation between those developing attack and defence strategies. At a more theoretical level, researchers have also studied bigger picture questions concerning the existence and computability of successful attacks. I will present examples of attack algorithms for neural networks in image classification, for transformer models in optical character recognition and for large language models. I will also show how recent generative diffusion models can be used adversarially. From a more theoretical perspective, I will outline recent results on the overarching question of whether, under reasonable assumptions, it is inevitable that AI tools will be vulnerable to attack.
Captain's log, star date 1968
William Shatner was the original Captain Kirk in Star Trek. But he also had a side line in singing; or rather talking his way through popular songs and Shakespeare plays. What was he up to? Who knows, but here's a song written by Bob Dylan, made famous by the Byrds and then beamed up to the USS Enterprise in Shatner's head. Enjoy.
This is an annual prize, which recognises high-achieving students at the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge, providing up to £1,000 to support their growth, help them deepen their knowledge and explore new ideas, along with exclusive access to the G-Research community
If any of your undergraduates might be interested please pass on.