
Meridian Visiting Researcher Programme
Accelerate your AI safety and governance research in Cambridge
The Meridian Visiting Researchers Programme brings talented researchers to Cambridge for 3-12 month residencies* focused on AI safety and governance. We provide workspace, community, and collaborative opportunities for researchers working on technical alignment, governance, interpretability, forecasting, and other research ensuring AI benefits humanity.
*Subject to visa requirements
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Accelerate your research
Meridian provides an energetic and fast-paced environment for you to complete your research. Many visitors tell us they accomplish more here in a few months than in a year working alone.
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Plug into Cambridge's AI safety scene
Cambridge has become a hotspot for AI safety work in Europe. Being here will give you the opportunity to engage with a large and welcoming community of researchers with a wide range of expertise.
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Structure with flexibility
With three key milestones, the residency provides enough structure to create momentum while providing plenty of space for deep independent research.
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Find collaborators
People discover colleagues with complementary skills here. These connections frequently develop into ongoing collaborations that continue long after their time at Meridian.
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Research support
Receive advice and feedback from experienced researchers within our community, and dedicated research support to ensure your project remains on track.
What we offer
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Securing funding
You may have already secured funding for your research project - but if you need support, we’re here. We will work with you remotely to:
Provide feedback on your proposal
Coach you through the process of applying for grants
Connect you with potential collaborators or advisors.
For more in-depth support and the chance to meet potential collaborators, consider applying to our in-person Research Accelerator weeks.
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Preparing for your move
If your project is funded, we will help to make your move to Cambridge go smoothly. We can offer:
Travel support to cover your journey costs
Guidance and funding for securing a VISA if you are travelling from abroad
Assistance with finding accomodation
3
Residency
Your research begins! Enjoy 24/7 access to our Cambridge workspace right in the historic centre, complete with free lunch, a sociable co-working area, and a quiet upstairs room.
Join a vibrant community of AI safety researchers where ideas flow freely over coffee and fika. We'll help you stay connected through regular seminars and events including our overnight retreats, while our team provides ongoing research mentorship with feedback and discussion as your work develops.
To provide structure and engagement with your work, we set three key milestones: you'll present your initial ideas to the community, submit a rough draft for feedback, and finally polish your work for publication with our support.
Who should apply?
Researchers looking to pivot into AI safety, security or governance
Existing AI safety, security, or governance researchers looking to build their network and portfolio
Graduates of programmes such as MATS, MARS, ARENA, ML4G, SPAR, and ERA with AI safety knowledge looking to transition to full-time research
PhD candidates, recent graduates, or postdoctoral researchers exploring AI safety directions
PIs interested in incorporating AI safety into their research agenda
People based in Cambridge or willing/excited to work there and contribute to strengthening Cambridge as a hub for AI safety research
Research Areas
Meridian's Visiting Researchers Programme welcomes researchers working across a broad range of AI safety, security, and governance topics. Our priority research areas include:
Technical Safety Research
Evaluating AI capabilities: Developing rigorous methods to assess the capabilities of advanced AI systems
AI interpretability and transparency: Making AI systems more understandable to humans
Model organisms of misaligned AI: Creating controlled examples of misalignment to study safety properties
Information security for safety-critical AI systems: Securing AI systems against threats and vulnerabilities
AI control and control evaluation: Designing and testing mechanisms for maintaining human control over AI
Making AI systems adversarially robust: Ensuring AI systems remain reliable under adversarial conditions
Scalable oversight: Developing methods to effectively supervise increasingly capable AI systems
Understanding cooperation between AI systems: Studying multi-agent dynamics and cooperation mechanisms
Forecasting and Modeling
Economic modeling of AI impact: Analyzing how AI development will affect economic systems
Forecasting AI capabilities and impacts: Predicting the trajectory and consequences of AI development
Identifying concrete paths to AI takeover: Mapping potential failure modes and their mitigations
Governance and Policy
AI lab governance: Developing responsible practices for AI research organizations
UK/US AI policy: Creating national frameworks for AI development and deployment
International AI governance: Building coordination mechanisms across national boundaries
Legal frameworks for AI: Addressing liability, regulation, and rights issues
Developing technology for AI governance: Building tools to support effective AI governance
Ethics and Values
AI welfare: Considering the moral status of artificial systems and ethical obligations toward them
Value alignment: Ensuring AI systems act in accordance with human values and intentions
Societal impacts of transformative AI: Analyzing broader implications for society and human welfare
This list is not exhaustive, and we welcome applications from researchers working on related areas not explicitly listed above.
FAQs
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We created this programme because good research doesn't happen in isolation. By bringing together people working on different aspects of AI safety in one physical space, we've seen how chance conversations lead to better research. The programme is about creating a supportive social and research environment rather than upskilling or directing what researchers work on.
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The Visiting Researchers Programme is specifically designed for researchers who want to perform independent research while benefiting from our Cambridge workspace and community for 3-12 months. Unlike fellowships, this programme focuses on providing space, light-touch research support, and connections rather than intensive supervision.
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We welcome applications from researchers at all career stages working on AI safety-related topics. This includes PhD students, postdoctoral researchers, independent researchers, industry professionals, and academic faculty. Although we have no specific requirements, applicants should be sufficiently experienced to be able to perform independent research with light-touch support.
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The programme is highly flexible. We usually prefer visits of at least 3 months to allow enough time for integration into our community and research progress, but can support stays of up to 12 months*, and flexible start dates. We understand that researchers often have other commitments during their stay, and can work with you to find an arrangement that suits you.
*If you are moving from abroad, please be aware that your stay may be limited by visa availability. See below: ‘Can I apply if I’m not based in the UK?’. -
To provide you with some minimal structure, and ensure your research receives feedback and engagement, Visiting Researchers will complete three key milestones during their residency.
At the end of Leg 1, you will present your initial progress and plans to the community.
At the end of Leg 2, you will submit a rough draft of your paper, or a report on your progress.
At the end of Leg 3, you will submit a final draft; we will help you polish for publication.
The format and date of these milestones is flexible, and will be set in discussion with you once you begin your residency. -
While there is a high level of flexibility on this programme, we expect you to work from our Cambridge office at least three days a week for the majority of your time here to ensure that you properly benefit from the research community.
We also expect you to deliver at the three key milestones, to ensure you receive proper engagement and feedback on your work, and that your project produces a tangible product by the end, whether this is a paper or otherwise. -
There's no standard schedule, as researchers manage their own time. Many researchers arrive mid-morning, work on their projects, participate in scheduled events like seminars or reading groups, have informal discussions over lunch or coffee, and continue working through the afternoon.
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Absolutely! We don't require researchers to start new projects for their visit. If you're already into a research project when you apply or join us, you're welcome to continue that work at Meridian; we're interested in supporting promising research at any stage of development.
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We do not provide direct research funding for visiting researchers - but we will assist you through the process of applying for a grant from organisations like Open Philanthropy, AISI, or the Long Term Future Fund. Please be aware that the availability of funding may vary throughout the year.
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We use a rolling admissions process, reviewing applications as they come in rather than only at fixed deadlines. We typically review applications within 2-3 weeks of submission. If we think there might be a good fit, we'll schedule a brief interview to discuss your research and answer any questions.
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No. While we want to understand what you plan to work on, we don't expect every applicant to have a completely developed research proposal. We welcome both new project ideas and continuations of existing work. Your application should clearly articulate your research questions, methodologies, and expected outcomes, but we understand that these may evolve during your time with us.
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Strong applications typically demonstrate:
A clear research direction relevant to AI safety
Evidence of research ability and independent thinking
Thoughtfulness about how your time at Meridian would be valuable
Potential to both contribute to and benefit from our community
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Absolutely. We welcome international researchers and can assist with visas and travel.
Most international Visiting Researchers will need either a Standard Visitor visa or, for longer stays, a specific research visa. The appropriate visa category depends on your nationality, the duration of your stay, and the specific nature of your research activities.
The Standard Visitor visa typically allows stays of up to 6 months. For academic visitors on sabbatical leave conducting research, stays of up to 12 months may be permitted.
We will assist with visa costs and processing should you be accepted into the programme.Important Disclaimer: While we provide supporting documentation and guidance for visa applications, all visas are subject to approval by the UK government. Meridian cannot guarantee visa approval, and researchers are ultimately responsible for ensuring they have the appropriate immigration permission to enter the country and participate in the programme.
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We understand that researchers often have other professional commitments. As long as these commitments don't significantly impact your ability to engage with the programme, we're happy to work with you to accommodate conferences, workshops, or other short-term obligations during your stay.
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No. The programme is designed for in-person participation. We generally expect researchers to be physically present in Cambridge for the majority of their visit.
If your question isn't answered here, please email us at info@meridiancambridge.org.