24 March 2025
Meet the King's Three Minute Thesis 2025 finalists
King's Doctoral College
Join us for the King's Three Minute Thesis Final, in-person or live stream to watch our nine finalists in action.

We are delighted to announce the finalists for our King's Three Minute Thesis (3MT) Competition which will take place both online and in-person on Wednesday 26 March.
The 3MT Grand Final will be live streamed to YouTube from 16:00 until 17:00 to make it easy for you to watch our postgraduate research students in action as they explain their research in just three minutes using only a single presentation slide.
The winner of the First Prize will receive £750 and Runner Up will receive £500 as selected by our Judging Panel.
You will also be able to vote for your favourite to win our People's Choice Award of £500! Voting opens during the live stream on Wednesday 26 March.
The winner of the King's Grand Final will continue to the national 3MT Competition, organised by Vitae.
Finalists
Amalia Miranda, The Right Fit: How Disease Models Shape the Future of Tuberculosis Research - School of Cancer & Pharmaceutical Sciences.
Andrea Mathilde Ulrichsen, Can sleep duration predict the ups and downs of bipolar disorder? - Department of Psychological Medicine.
Kaat De Backer, Infant removal at birth: Listening to unheard voices - School of Life Course & Population Sciences.
Kirsten Rock, Equity in healthcare: harm reduction for people who use drugs - School of Cancer & Pharmaceutical Sciences.
Mubaraq Yakubu, AI for Pituitary Adenoma Management - School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences.
Nishat Zakaria, Zinc and Copper: The Hidden Regulators of Skin Ageing and Disease - School of Life Course & Population Sciences.
Oliver Roughton, A Word Can Paint a Thousand Pictures: ideas of language in the eighteenth century - Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures.
Rosie Barrows, Cardiac Digital Twins: from Code to Care - School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences.
Tiffany Baptiste, The Heart’s Hidden Springs: A New Way to Treat Atrial Fibrillation - School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences
If you would like to attend the event in-person, in New Hunts House, we have some places available, please book your space. The in-person event will be followed by a drinks reception where the winners will be announced.