2018 Rutherford Discovery Fellowships announced
Royal Society Te Apārangi
For
immediate release
Thursday 4 October 2018
2018 Rutherford Discovery Fellowships to accelerate research careers announced
Ten early¬ to mid-career researchers have been awarded Rutherford Discovery Fellowships that support them to accelerate their research careers in New Zealand.
The awarded Fellows’ research programme spans a wide variety of interesting questions such as how best to manage whale stranding by determining factors that influence animal stress and survival, understanding potential longer-term social impacts of traumatic brain injuries (concussions), exploring how to support refugee integration in Aotearoa, and the development of minimally-invasive methods to detect gastrointestinal disorders.
The fellowships seek to attract, retain and grow New Zealand’s most talented early- to mid-career researchers and support their career development by helping them to establish a track record for future research leadership. A few of the new fellows will be returning from overseas to take up these fellowships.
Chief Executive of Royal Society Te Apārangi, Dr Andrew Cleland FRSNZ, says it will be exciting to watch the career paths of these researchers, who are in disciplines as diverse as philosophy, bioengineering, ecology and astrophysics.
“The Fellowships support them to explore the area they are most interested in and potentially build a team around them. It allows them to build on their skills and networks to establish themselves as world class research leaders based in New Zealand.
“While selected entirely on merit, it is pleasing to see that this year six of the 10 fellowships have been awarded to females.”
The Rutherford Discovery Fellowships receive government funding of $8 million per annum, and award $800,000 over five years to each Research Fellow. There are at least 50 Rutherford Discovery Fellows supported at any one time.
Royal Society Te Apārangi manages
the fellowships programme on behalf of
government.
For 2018, the
Rutherford Discovery Fellowship recipients are:
•
Dr Timothy Angeli, University of Auckland,
for research entitled: Electrophysiologically-based
diagnostics and therapeutics for gastrointestinal disorders:
bridging the gap from engineering benchtop to clinical
bedside
• Dr Sarah Diermeier,
University of Otago, for research entitled: Long non-coding
RNAs as new drivers of tumour progression
•
Dr Ceridwen Fraser, University of Otago,
for research entitled: The race for new space: disentangling
the processes that shape global patterns of
biodiversity
• Associate Professor Jay
Marlowe, University of Auckland, for research
entitled: Dislocation in an age of connection: Mapping
refugee settlement trajectories within an increasingly
mobile world
• Dr Jonathan
Squire, University of Otago, for research entitled:
Cosmic Turbulence, Microinstabilities, and the Magnetisation
of the Universe
• Dr Karen
Stockin, Massey University, for research entitled:
The application of Artificial Intelligence (AI), innovative
technologies and evolutionary theory to address the
conservation-welfare nexus during human-wildlife
interactions
• Dr Lisa Te
Morenga, Victoria University of Wellington, for
research entitled: Naku te rourou, nau te rourou, ka oranga
ai te iwi (With my food basket and your food basket the
people will be well)
• Associate
Professor Alice Theadom, Auckland University of
Technology, for research entitled: Developing a
biopsychosocial model of mild traumatic brain injury
•
Dr Jonathan Tonkin, University of
Canterbury, for research entitled: Rethinking ecological
networks in changing environments
• Dr
Krushil Watene, Massey University, for research
entitled: Intergenerational Justice: Obligations and
Decision-Making
More information on the new Rutherford Discovery Fellows is available at: royalsociety.org.nz/RDFs
ENDS