Summary
Anthony Baptista is a postdoctoral research fellow specialising in the intersection of graph theory, topological data analysis and statistical physics to decode cell–cell interactions from spatial transcriptomics. With eight years of academic and research experience across Aix-Marseille, CNRS, Queen Mary, The Alan Turing Institute and King’s College London, he bridges rigorous theoretical methods and applied spatial biology. He co-organises the Turing interest group on Topology and Geometry for Data and contributes to King’s Spatial Biology facility, highlighting a commitment to community-building and translational research. Comfortable with AI and network theory, he applies mathematical rigor to biological questions and often leverages non-obvious topological signatures to reveal tissue-level organisation.
8 years of coding experience
2 years of employment as a software developer
Maths sup (Maths intensive foundation degree), Maths sup (Maths intensive foundation degree) at Lycée Saint Louis
Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Biomathématiques, bioinformatique et calcul pour la biologie, Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Biomathématiques, bioinformatique et calcul pour la biologie at Aix-Marseille Université
Master 1 Fundamental Physics, Master 1 Fundamental Physics at Université Pierre et Marie Curie
Master 2 (M2), Biophysics and Statistical Physics, Master 2 (M2), Biophysics and Statistical Physics at Sorbonne University
English, Spanish, French