About
Cansu Uluseker integrates her background in mathematics with a focus on environmental modelling. At the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH), Cansu Uluseker contributes to predictive modelling, focusing on environmental systems. Here, she applies her knowledge as an environmental contamination modeller.
After earning her BSc in Elementary Mathematics Education from Middle East Technical University (METU) in Turkey in 2011, Cansu's academic path led her to the PhD position at the University of Trento, collaborating with the Microsoft Research Center for Computational and Systems Biology. Her doctoral research was a blend of theoretical work and practical application, developing a framework for simulating and analysing biological regulatory systems. She constructed a multi-level model of glucose homeostasis and mapped the transcriptional regulatory network of the Escherichia coli phosphate starvation response, including hands-on work in synthetic promoter design.
After her PhD, Cansu joined the University of Stavanger in Norway as a Postdoctoral Fellow within the JPIAMR project Genegas, sharpening her focus on antimicrobial resistance. She explored mathematical modelling to predict the spread of resistance genes in wastewater treatment environments. Continuing her postdoctoral journey, Cansu became a Research Associate at the University of Birmingham, contributing to the AMRflows UK-India project. Her work involved developing models to understand and predict AMR dynamics and antibiotic concentrations in India's river systems, in collaboration with IIT Madras.
After earning her BSc in Elementary Mathematics Education from Middle East Technical University (METU) in Turkey in 2011, Cansu's academic path led her to the PhD position at the University of Trento, collaborating with the Microsoft Research Center for Computational and Systems Biology. Her doctoral research was a blend of theoretical work and practical application, developing a framework for simulating and analysing biological regulatory systems. She constructed a multi-level model of glucose homeostasis and mapped the transcriptional regulatory network of the Escherichia coli phosphate starvation response, including hands-on work in synthetic promoter design.
After her PhD, Cansu joined the University of Stavanger in Norway as a Postdoctoral Fellow within the JPIAMR project Genegas, sharpening her focus on antimicrobial resistance. She explored mathematical modelling to predict the spread of resistance genes in wastewater treatment environments. Continuing her postdoctoral journey, Cansu became a Research Associate at the University of Birmingham, contributing to the AMRflows UK-India project. Her work involved developing models to understand and predict AMR dynamics and antibiotic concentrations in India's river systems, in collaboration with IIT Madras.
Organisation
UKCEH - Pollution
Role
Member (Staff)