CompSciOxford
Department of Computer Science at the University of Oxford
7 times ranked top university in the world for computer science #compscioxford
Our mission is to be an internationally leading centre of research and teaching across a broad spectrum of computer science, ranging from foundational discoveries to interdisciplinary work with real-world impact in computational biology, quantum computing, computational linguistics, information systems, software verification to software engineering.
The department is home to undergraduates, full-time and part-time Master's students, and has a strong doctoral programme. We are proud of our history as one of the longest-established computer science departments in the country, and we continue to provide teaching to some of the world’s brightest minds.
MSc in Advanced Computer Science academic overview
DPhil in Computer Science academic overview
Strachey Lecture: Advances in Garbled Circuits
Strachey Lecture: Will Computers prove theorems?
Strachey Lecture: Formalizing the Future: Lean’s Impact on Mathematics, Programming, and AI
Strachey Lecture: Privacy, Verification, Robustness: A Cryptographer's perspective on ML
DPhil in Computer Science academic overview
Discussions with a DPhil: Madeleine Wyburd
MSc in Advanced Computer Science academic overview
Strachey Lecture: From probabilistic bisimulation to representation learning via metrics
Strachey Lecture: The Computer in the Sky
Strachey Lecture: From classical to non-classical stochastic shortest path problems
Strachey Lecture: How Can Algorithms Help to Protect our Privacy
Opening the box: Quantum computing is for everyone
Ri Christmas Lectures: Behind the scenes with Ana Namburete
University of Oxford Department of Computer Science ranked number one in the world
What is Philosophy?
Oxford University Department of Computer Science tour
Reasoning with Infinity in a Finite World: Lazy Evaluation and Recreating the Library of Babel
Day in the Life: Ellie
A Journey to Computer Science and Philosophy at Oxford
Thinking Machines, Computational Models, and Moral Robots: The Philosophical Frontiers of CS