[2] In 2016 he co-founded Mind Foundry,[3] an artificial intelligence company, along with fellow professor Stephen Roberts.
[5] He has a BEng in Mechanical Engineering and a BSc in both Pure Mathematics and Physics from the University of Western Australia.
[10] His career has focused in particular on Bayesian approaches to AI and machine learning, named after the famous British statistician Thomas Bayes.
[12] In 2013, Osborne co-authored a paper alongside Swedish-German economist Carl Benedikt Frey called "The Future of Employment: How Susceptible are Jobs to Computerisation?".
[14][15][16] In 2023 Osborne gave oral evidence to the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee on the subject of the "Governance of Artificial Intelligence".