Rutherford Discovery Fellowships Chosen
News release from the Royal Society of New Zealand
Wednesday 10 November 2010
(Being announced at the Research Honours event 10 November 2010)
Ten researchers chosen for new Rutherford Discovery Fellowships
Ten talented researchers have been chosen as the first
recipients of a new Government funded scheme designed to
support early to mid-career researchers.
The Rutherford
Discovery Fellowships will provide financial support of up
to $200,000 per year to the researchers over a five-year
period. This funding goes towards both their salary and
their programme of work.
The Rutherford Discovery Fellowships are an important scheme within New Zealand's research system, says Minister of Research, Science and Technology Wayne Mapp.
“High-quality research is the
cornerstone of innovation. Science and innovation are at the
heart of building our economic growth. The success of our
science and innovation system is dependent on the quality of
the people working within it.
“These Fellowships
empower leading researchers who are at a critical juncture
in their careers.
“The successful candidates are of a very high calibre. I look forward to their success and growth over the coming years,” he said.
The recipients were announced on Wednesday night at the annual Research Honours celebration event of the Royal Society of New Zealand.
The researchers are:
• Dr Donna Rose Addis,
University of Auckland, Department of Psychology
• Dr
Noam Greenberg, Victoria University of Wellington, School of
Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science
• Dr Jason
Tylianakis, University of Canterbury, School of Biological
Sciences
• Dr Ashton Bradley, University of Otago,
Department of Physics
• Dr Paul Gardner, University of
Canterbury
• Dr Murray Cox, Massey University,
Institute of Molecular BioSciences
• Associate
Professor Alexei Drummond, University of Auckland,
Department of Computer Science
• Associate Professor
Jennifer Hay, University of Canterbury, School of Languages,
Cultures and Linguistics
• Dr John Reynolds, University
of Otago, Department of Anatomy and Structural
Biology
• Dr Eric Le Ru, Victoria University of
Wellington, School of Chemical and Physical Sciences
The new fellowships, administered by the Royal Society of New Zealand, have been set up to fill a gap in support for researchers in the three to 10 year period after they complete a doctorate degree.
It has been found that this is the time when many researchers can find it difficult to progress their careers, especially in areas with heavy competition for funding.
The funding will enable researchers to investigate a particular research topic, and help them establish their career in New Zealand.
The chairperson of the selection panel, Professor Margaret Brimble, said it was a difficult decision for the panel to only choose ten people to receive the fellowships.
“We received a large number of exceptional applications in this first year and those chosen are very worthy recipients. They are not only excellent researchers, but also potential future leaders for research in New Zealand.”
The Government is making a substantial investment in this new scheme. Each year there will be 10 Fellowships awarded. In the first four years the Government will invest more than $24 million. When the scheme is fully operational in 2015/16, more than $9 million a year will fund about 50 fellows at any one time.
List of recipients with details of their research programme:
Dr Donna Rose
Addis
(University of Auckland, Department of
Psychology)
“Building our Autobiographies: How the
Brain Constructs Past and Future Autobiographical
Events”
The various details of memories are stored as
fragments in different brain areas and memories are then
reconstructed when we remember. Storing memories in
fragments does have advantages: these details can be used to
imagine novel future events. With this programme of
research Dr Addis aims to advance our understanding of how a
region of the brain, the hippocampus, is involved in the
constructive memory processes.
Dr Noam
Greenberg
(Victoria University of Wellington, School of
Mathematics, Statistics and Computer
Science)
“Effective randomness, lowness notions and
higher computability”
In much the same way as
biologists aim to understand life, and particle physicists
aim to understand the nature of matter and energy,
computability theorists try to understand the essence of
computation. Dr Greenberg intends to study objects which
are not quite computable, but very close to being so, along
with randomness using the tools of logic and
mathematics.
Dr Jason Tylianakis
(University of
Canterbury, School of Biological Sciences)
“Reweaving
the web of life: the interplay of species traits and
resource constraints during the assembly and disassembly of
ecological networks in changing environments”
Global
environmental changes threaten biodiversity, but their
effects on the networks of interactions connecting all
living organisms are largely unknown. Using analyses of
global datasets, combined with a field study in the unique
Franz Josef chronosequence - where networks of different
time periods are revealed as the glacier retreats - Dr
Tylianakis will study these network structures in detail and
relate this to the function of ecosystems.
Dr Ashton
Bradley
(University of Otago, Department of
Physics)
“The Birth, Life, and Death of a Quantum
Vortex Dipole”
At ultra-low temperatures atoms can
undergo a phase transition, coalescing into a quantum
droplet exhibiting the remarkable property of frictionless
flow, known as superfluidity. When a superfluid rotates, it
does so by creating a quantized vortex resembling a tiny
fluid whirlpool or tornado. Dr Bradley has developed a new
theory of ultra-cold atomic superfluids and will investigate
the fundamental nature of quantum turbulence.
Dr Paul
Gardner
(University of Canterbury)
“Bioinformatic
approaches to functionally characterise RNAs”
Together
with proteins, fats, sugars and DNA, RNA is a member of the
selected group of molecules that play a major role in life's
chemical machinery. Recent scientific advances have shown
that RNAs are important for turning genes on and off in
response to different signals. Dr Gardner, who will return
to New Zealand from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in
Cambridge, will perform computational analyses of RNAs to
inform us of RNA's further diverse functions.
Dr Murray
Cox
(Massey University, Institute of Molecular
BioSciences)
“Computational reconstruction of genomic
evolution”
The ability to integrate new technologies
for studying the whole genome with sophisticated
computational analysis remains a key bottleneck in advancing
the biological sciences. The interdisciplinary field of
computational genomics is increasingly linking these diverse
subject areas. Using novel computational approaches Dr Cox
will investigate human prehistory in the Indo-Pacific
region, and the way genes are regulated in an inter-species
fungal hybrid which arose from two highly divergent parent
species.
Associate Professor Alexei
Drummond
(University of Auckland, Department of Computer
Science)
“Computational analysis for molecular ecology
and evolutionary biology”
Questions such as how
species evolve in the face of infectious disease and climate
change still demand satisfactory answers. To understand the
origins and maintenance of biodiversity requires a
statistical framework that can synthesize molecular data
with ecology and climate. Associate Professor Drummond will
lead an international collaborative project to develop novel
computational models to shed light on the processes of
speciation, diversification and extinction.
Associate
Professor Jennifer Hay
(University of Canterbury, School
of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics)
“Episodic word
memory”
Individuals know many hundreds of thousands of
words. Recent results indicate that what we know about each
word is shaped in a dynamic ongoing way with our own
experience with that word. Associate Professor Hay's
research program explores episodic word memory - asking what
the range of environments (social, physical, contextual) in
which we encounter a word does to the way we hear, use and
pronounce that word.
Dr John Reynolds
(University of
Otago, Department of Anatomy and Structural
Biology)
“Improving brain function: a balancing act”
Disruption of normal communication between brain areas
is a feature of a number of common brain disorders such as
stroke and epilepsy. In the proposed research Dr Reynolds
will use experimental approaches to alter the normal balance
between excitation and inhibition in the brain and in doing
so attempt to improve function in these brain
disorders.
Dr Eric Le Ru
(Victoria University of
Wellington, School of Chemical and Physical
Sciences)
“Surface-enhanced spectroscopy: from
fundamentals to applications”
The remarkable optical
properties of nanostructures are increasingly used in a
variety of emerging optical methods aiming at dramatically
improving the sensitivity of devices for molecule detection
and identification, ultimately down to a single-molecule.
Dr Le Ru will study both theoretical and experimental
aspects of electromagnetism at the nano-scale and in
particular nano-plasmonics with the goal of dramatically
improving our fundamental understanding of single molecules
on surfaces and the applicability and transfer of these
advanced techniques to real-world
problems.
ends