Tom Gur’s research is in Complexity Theory and Quantum Computing. This includes investigating the power and limitations of classical and quantum algorithms and their interplay with learning theory, coding theory, cryptography, and pure mathematics. He is leading a 7-years £1M+ project in classical and quantum verifiable computing as a part of a UKRI Future Leaders fellowship, and an interdisciplinary EPSRC New Horizons award joint between Warwick CS and Physics. He is an editor for the Quantum Journal and has chaired international conferences. He co-founded and co-directed the interdisciplinary centre Warwick Quantum. He resolved long-standing open problems including a central 16-years-old open problem in coding theory about verification of locally decodable codes, for which he gave a plenary tutorial at the international IEEE FOCS conference. He is closely collaborating with industry partners from StarkWare Industries, ZCash, IBM research, and Foxconn Quantum Computing, and his work was implemented in deployed real-world systems. He has done public engagement work by advising for Quanta Magazine articles and podcasts, and by serving in public relations campaigns. He serves as the lead diversity and inclusivity advisor for several large international bodies (including ACM STOC and CCC).