Academic Profile

People Feature

Xuejie Ding

Non-Stipendiary Research Fellow
Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of Sociology

Research Interest: sociogenomics, health, demography, life course, ageing, education, and chronotype.

Xuejie Ding received her DPhil in Sociology at the University of Oxford in 2018. Since then, she has been working as a Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Oxford in the ERC funded SOCIOGENOME and CHRONO project led by Prof. Melinda Mills

Her research interests are primarily directed towards adopting a sociogenomic approach to bridge the knowledge on contextual, social and biological influences on health. The data she uses cover a wide range of countries and regions. With data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Survey (CHARLS), she found that the association between health and individual-level socioeconomic status is consistent across China. Provincial variations in economic development, income inequality, and health infrastructure are associated with a range of health outcomes for Chinese midlife and older adults. Using genetic risk scores for education from recent Genome-wide Association Studies (GWAS) as an instrumental variable and data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), she has identified the causal effect between educational attainment and a variety of health outcomes among the American older adults. Her work has also shown that the genetic effects for education on individual differences in cognition become less prominent over the life course. Her research aims at advancing the understanding of health inequalities by combining sociological theories with approaches from biology, molecular genetics, and medical sciences. 

Her future research is going to adopt innovative methodologies to understand fertility behaviours via both societal and biological bases.

Xuejie Ding

Publications

Ding, X., Barban, N., Tropf, F., & Mills, M. (2019).  The relationship between cognitive decline and a genetic predictor of educational attainment. Social Science & Medicine, 112549

Ding, X., Barban, N., & Mills, M. C. (2019). Educational attainment and allostatic load in later life: Evidence using genetic markersPreventive medicine129, 105866.

Ding, X., Biilari, F. C., & Gietel-Basten, S. (2017). Health of midlife and older adults in China: the role of regional economic development, inequality, and institutional setting. International journal of public health, 62(8), 857-867.

Chou, B., & Ding, X. (2015). A comparative analysis of Shenzhen and Kashgar in development as special economic zones. East Asia, 32(2), 117-136