University of Auckland welcomes Te Pūtea Rangahau a Marsden
Some of the challenges New Zealand faces in
health, environment, culture, science, and engineering will
be addressed thanks to nearly $22 million awarded to the
University of Auckland from Marsden funding .
Why a gene variant specific to Māori and Pacific people increases blood pressure, understanding how colour-blind octopus are so exceptional at camouflage, discovering why invasive species adapt rapidly despite low genetic diversity, and using high resolution imaging to better understand the connected networks required for cardiac function are just a handful of the University of Auckland’s research projects to receive nearly $1million each from the 2019 Marsden Fund round.
In total, the projects of 35 University of Auckland researchers and research groups were been awarded $21.7 million
Established researchers were awarded 21 grants ($17.5m), and 14 projects ($4.2m) received Te Pūtea Rangahau a Marsden Fast-Start grants supporting early career researchers to develop independent research and build excellent careers in New Zealand
Areas covered by Fast-Start applicants include investigating how dynamic coastal dune systems are shaped by wave-driven over-wash, understanding the way young people responded to the widespread illness and loss of the 1918-19 influenza pandemic, and unpicking coercive disarmament - the practice of forcing states and armed groups to give up their weapons.
University of Auckland Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Professor Jim Metson said it was pleasing to see the success of the University in this round and the ongoing value given to our research and that being carried out by research institutions around the country.
“Congratulations are due to the Primary Investigators and their teams for the effort that goes in to applying for a Marsden grant in a very competitive environment. We were very pleased with these successes, not just for what it means today in terms of funding the projects, but for the real impact this research can and does have on the world.
“Whether it’s advancing the frontiers of human knowledge or contributing to specific solutions to heart health or environmental degradation or mental illness in our youth, research is at the heart of what this University does.”
The full list of University of Auckland Marsden Grant recipients:
Auckland
Bioengineering Institute
Professor Bruce
Smaill, $960,000: Image-based network modelling
of cardiac function
Dr Bryan Ruddy,
$300,000: The magnetic myocyte: applying inspiration from
muscle physiology to electric motors*
Faculty of Arts
Associate
Professor Susanne Trnka, $870,000: Rethinking
Responsibility for Youth Mental Health in the Digital
Age
Associate Professor Sarina
Perason $870,000: Asian New Zealanders on
Screen: visibility past and present
Dr Marama
Muru-Lanning, $660,000: Listening to the Voices
of our Harbours: Kāwhia, Manukau and
Whangarei
Dr Ngarino Ellis,
$522,945: Ngā Taonga o Wharawhara: The World of Māori
Body Adornment
Dr Danping Want,
$300,000: Reconceptualising Chinese Language Learning in
New Zealand*
Dr Charlotte Bennet
$300,000: Recovering Children’s Experiences of the
1918-19 Influenza Pandemic *
Faculty of
Engineering
Dr Tim Giffney,
$300,000: Simultaneous deposition and poling of
piezoelectric composites for 3D printed sensors and
actuators
Dr Colin Whittaker
$299,420: To accrete or erode? New insights into wave
(re)shaping of coastal dunes.
Faculty of
Medical and Health Sciences
Dr Misha
Vorobyev, $960,000: Colour blind camouflage in
octopus
Associate Professor Justin
Dean, $959,000: Short and sweet: Does the
breakdown of extracellular matrix sugar impair brain
development after inflammation?
Professor
Peter Shepherd, 959,000: Why does a gene variant
specific to Māori and Pacific peoples increase blood
pressure
Dr Kimberley Mellor,
$952,000: Cardiac glycogen processing: defining a new
metabolic pathway in heart health and
disease
Dr James Fisher, $938,000:
Unravelling a clot-less link between atrial fibrillation
and dementia
Dr Julie Lim, $896,000:
The tick tock of the redox clock: shedding new light on
the role of the lens in regulating circadian
rhythms
Associate Professor Rachel
Simon-Kumar, $842,000: Double jeopardy or double
advantage? Ethnic women in New Zealand politics
Faculty of Law
Dr Anna
Hood, $300,000: Coercive Disarmament in
International Law: 1919-2019*
Liggins
Institute
Dr Tommi Vatanen,
$300,000: Phages as modulators of the human gut
microbiome*
Faculty of
Science
Dr Anna Santure,
$960,000: The role of transposable elements in rapid
adaptation of invasive species
Dr Claude
Aguergaray, $960,000: New pulse dynamics for the
lasers of tomorrow
Dr Ingo Pecher,
$952,000: Geologic champagne: What controls sudden
release of CO2 at glacial terminations on the Chatham
Rise?
Professor Stuart Murdoch,
$922,000: Multimode microresonator optical frequency
combs
Dr Gilles Bellon, $829,000:
Memory in clouds
Associate Professor Karen
Waldie, $766,000: Polygenic and environmental
markers of mental health status in New Zealand
children
Dr Bernd Krauskopf,
$689,000: Feedback loops in climate systems: the maths of
delays and the consequences
Professor Rod
Gover, $643,000: A new bridge between geometry
and analysis
Professor Andre Nies,
$448,000: Topological algebra, first-order logic, and
computability
Dr Iain Hay, $300,000:
Nanoscale imaging and characterisation of bacterial phage
secretion*
Dr Ben Stevenson,
$300,000: Estimating animal population size in an
unobservable spatial obstacle course*
Dr Arne
Nieuwenhuys, $300,000: Tired and out of control?
Effects of sleep deprivation on response inhibition under
low and high threat*
Dr Chris Erb,
$300,000: Capturing the Mind in Action: Linking the
Behavioural and Neural Dynamics of Cognitive
Control*
Dr Davide Mercadante,
$300,000: Looking at the dark side of the proteome: how
do post-translational modifications control highly
disordered proteins for the regulation of genetic
transcription?*
Dr Yalu Wen,
$300,000: Disease risk prediction using high-dimensional
multi-omics data*
Dr David Waite,
$300,000: The role of viruses in the spread of antibiotic
resistance: Evolution through rapid, selection-free
diversification of resistance genes*
*
Fast-Start
Applications to the Marsden Fund are highly
competitive. Te Pūtea Rangahau a Marsden, the Marsden Fund,
has allocated $83.671 million (excluding GST) to 125
research projects across Aotearoa New Zealand. These grants
support excellent New Zealand research in the areas of
science, engineering, maths, social sciences and the
humanities.
The grants are distributed over three years and are fully costed, paying for salaries, students and postdoctoral positions, institutional overheads and research consumables. Te Pūtea Rangahau a Marsden is managed by Royal Society Te Apārangi on behalf of the government.