He teaches threat detection, risk assessment and operational aspects of security. Her current research portfolio includes threat modelling and detection (including anomaly detection for insider threats), visual cybersecurity analysis, risk propagation logic and communication, resilience strategies, privacy, distributed ledger vulnerability and understanding cyber-damage and how it emerges for both individual organisations and nations. She is principal investigator on the AXIS sponsored project "Analysing Cyber-Value-at-Risk, Residual Risk and models for Systemic Cyber-Risk" focused on developing a method for predicting potential damage from cyber-attacks on enterprises. She is co-investigator of the PETRAS EPSRC-sponsored Internet of Things Research Hub project "Cyber Risk Assessment for Coupled Systems", which is developing a new risk assessment method aimed at helping organisations prepare for the threats and vulnerabilities we will face as the Internet of Things evolves. She is the director and founder of the Global Cyber Security Capability Centre (GCSCC) at the Oxford Martin School, where she continues to serve as Director conducting research on what constitutes national cyber security capability, working with countries and international organisations around the world. She was a founding director of the Oxford Cyber Security Network launched in 2008 and now called Cyber Security Oxford, and is a member of the Strategic Advisory Board of the World Economic Forum's Centre for Cyber Security. She is also a member of a scientific advisory board for a UK government department. Sadie Creese is a Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford.