Ex-DeepMind researchers raised $50M to build AI that figures out which scientific questions are worth asking



TL;DR

London AI lab Inherent raised $50M from Index Ventures and Radical Ventures to build self-improving AI for scientific discovery. Ex-UK AI tsar Matt Clifford advises.

London-based AI lab Inherent emerged from stealth on Wednesday with a $50 million seed round co-led by Index Ventures and Radical Ventures. Nvidia’s venture arm NVentures also participated, alongside Ex/Ante, Metaplanet, Macroscopic Ventures, and Mythos Ventures. It is among Europe’s largest AI stealth-to-launch rounds in 2026.

The founding team comes from DeepMind, Microsoft, and Reka AI. Tantum Collins and Edward Hughes previously collaborated on cooperative AI research at DeepMind. Louis Kirsch, another co-founder, also worked at DeepMind. Kaloyan Aleksiev came from Reka AI and Microsoft.

Collins has a policy background that most AI lab founders lack. He worked on AI policy at the Biden White House before co-founding Inherent. Matt Clifford, co-founder of Entrepreneurs First and the UK government’s former AI tsar, has joined as an adviser.

Inherent is building a platform called Faraday, named after the scientist. Its purpose is not to answer questions faster. It is to figure out which questions are worth asking in the first place.

Most AI is built to answer questions. What it can’t do yet is figure out which questions are worth asking, the open-ended curiosity that produced penicillin, the microwave, the GPU,” said Danny Rimer, partner at Index Ventures. “That’s the gap Inherent is building into.

Faraday pairs human researchers with AI agents that are designed to improve themselves iteratively on hard scientific problems. The company describes this as “AI-native science,” a paradigm it says will look and feel different from the scientific method as practised for the past 400 years.

Index Ventures framed the bet in those terms. “AI-native science will be messier, less legible, but capable of exceptional outcomes,” the firm wrote in a blog post announcing the investment. The conviction is that the most valuable application of frontier AI is not automating existing workflows but enabling discoveries that human researchers could not reach alone.

Inherent is structured as a public benefit corporation, a legal form that requires the company to consider its impact on society alongside shareholder returns. The structure is unusual for a venture-backed AI lab. It signals that the founders view governance as a competitive advantage rather than a constraint.

European AI startups are increasingly demonstrating that they can raise at scales previously reserved for Silicon Valley. Inherent’s $50 million seed sits alongside Peec AI’s $10 million ARR in six months, Lovable’s $100 million single-month revenue, and Mistral’s $300 million ARR. The gap between European and American AI funding is narrowing for companies building in categories where the technology is genuinely new.

Anthropic’s Glasswing project demonstrated that frontier AI can find vulnerabilities at a rate that outpaces human remediation. Inherent’s bet is that the same dynamic applies to scientific discovery: AI agents that can explore hypothesis spaces faster than human researchers can, while humans provide the judgment, taste, and ethical guardrails that agents cannot.

The team’s combination of DeepMind research credentials and White House policy experience gives it unusual positioning. It can credibly pitch to both the scientific establishment and the government institutions that fund basic research. Whether Faraday delivers on the promise of AI-native science will take years to evaluate. The $50 million buys the time to find out.



Source link

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get our latest articles delivered straight to your inbox. No spam, we promise.

Recent Reviews


Immerse yourself in nature in North Somerset at these scenic locations – all accessible by public transport! 

Sophie Neill is a wellbeing college tutor at North Somerset Wellbeing College and a forest therapy practitioner, trained with the Bristol community interest company Light Box. She now brings her forest therapy expertise into the College, offering sessions that help learners to slow down, notice the natural world, and find space to reflect. 

This spring, North Somerset Wellbeing College is launching a four-week Forest Therapy course, running every Tuesday from 3 to 24 March 2026. Each two-hour session includes guided meditations, ways to engage the senses, and time to reflect and journal outdoors. Find out more and book your place here. 

In my last blog post, we discussed how spending time in nature has many benefits for our mental and physical health. Nature is all around us, but for those of us who live in urban environments it doesn’t always feel like it – if we want to feel completely immersed in nature, we need to hunt out the perfect spot to enjoy. 

This can be even more challenging if, like me, you use public transport to get around. With this in mind, here are my favourite natural spaces in North Somerset to relax and recharge in – with the added bonus that all these locations are accessible by public transport: 

Weston-super-Mare Beach 

The beach at Weston-super-Mare is a popular sweeping sandy beach on the North Somerset coast. With wide views of the sea and it’s iconic pier, this beach is a great spot to sit quietly and unwind your mind.  

How to get there: The X1 service runs from Weston-super-Mare to Bristol, making it easy to hop on and off for a day out by the sea. The route takes you through scenic countryside and villages too.  

Clevedon Beach 

A scenic pebbly beach that runs southwest from Clevedon. A Victorian pier at the north of the promenade provides the opportunity to wander along and enjoy the sights and smells of the sea, while Clevedon Marine Lake to the south fills from the sea and is open to swimmers all year round.  

Continue walking south of the marine lake you will find that the promenade ends but the journey continues, bringing you onto coastal paths that are surrounded by countryside and sea. 

How to get there: The X5 from Weston-Super-Mare Interchange will take you the Salthouse Fields stop, just by the Marine Lake or take the X7 coming from Bristol. 

Backwell Lake 

The perfect location for an accessible and relaxed walk. Walking around the edge of the lake is one mile in total and takes 20 to 30 minutes, making it the perfect spot to watch birds and enjoy the surroundings. The lake is home to ten species of bird and you can also spot coot, moorhen, swans and even heron! 

How to get there: The train running from Weston to Bristol stops at Nailsea and Backwell station which is a few minutes’ walk from the lake. Please be aware that there are steep steps down from the station. 

Sand Bay 

Tucked away just north of Weston-Super-Mare with views across the Severn Estuary and to Sand Point (which can also be walked to, but is a steep journey), Sand Bay is perfect for enjoying the serenity of the water. It’s also a popular spot for dog walkers. There is a little café and a fish and chip shop, plus the bus journey in itself is an experience – the double decker climbs up onto the edge of Weston Woods giving dramatic views over the sea. Sit on the inner seats of the top deck to avoid tree branches! 

How to get there: Catch the number 1 bus from Weston-Super-Mare Interchange. 

Worlebury Woods 

Nestled on the top of Worlebury Hill, with paths that meander throughout the woodland. If you stick to the main path through the centre of the woods (which is a mainly flat route), you can walk to the end and back in roughly an hour. There are picnic benches midway along the route, perfect for a spot of lunch. Hidden deeper in the woods you can find deer and on the main path look out for the ancient Worlebury Hillfort. 

How to get there: Catch the number 6 bus from Weston-Super-Mare Interchange. 

Parks of Weston

Clarence Park, Ashcombe Park, Princes Consort Gardens and Grove Park are perfect if you would rather stay closer to the urban area. Not strictly a park, but I have also added Princes Consort Gardens for the fantastic view over the estuary. Central to Weston you will find Grove Park, which is home to our North Somerset Wellbeing College Forest Therapy sessions which are running throughout March 2026. Spaces are still available, and you are welcome to join us if you live in North Somerset. 

How to get there: You will need to double check the bus timetables for these routes, although Grove Park is centrally located to Weston-Super-Mare, a short walk from the Weston bus Interchange and 15 mins from the train station. 

North Somerset Wellbeing College four-week Forest Therapy course is open to adults aged 18 and over in North Somerset. Sessions will be every Tuesday from March 3 to March 24, 2026, with each two-hour session offering gentle guided meditations, practical ways to engage with your senses, and time to reflect and journal. Find out more and book onto the course here. 



Source link