Early-career researchers announced
Thursday 14 November 2019
Rutherford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowships and Scholarship supporting early-career researchers announced
2019 Rutherford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowships and a Cambridge-Rutherford Memorial PhD Scholarship have been awarded to eleven early-career researchers in Aotearoa.
The 2019 Postdoctoral Fellows will be exploring a
diverse range of research topics, including:
•
metamaterials that could potentially turn every glass window
into a transparent solar panel;
• pathogen-resistant
kiwifruit that do not require metal-based
pesticides;
• improved earthquake hazard resilience in
Aotearoa;
• new methods for producing personalised
cancer therapies that enable the patient’s own immune
system to search for and destroy cancerous cells.
The Rutherford Foundation Fellowships and Cambridge-Rutherford Memorial PhD Scholarships seek to build human capability in research, science and technology, including social sciences and the humanities. The funding opportunities support early career researchers who demonstrate a passion for research, and have a strong sense of the purpose and benefits of research to Aotearoa. Receiving a Rutherford Foundation award is expected to have a significant value in the future career development of the supported scholars and postdoctoral fellows and help them to establish a foundation on which to embark on an independent research career.
Royal Society Te Apārangi President Professor Wendy Larner FRSNZ said the Society was pleased to award fellowships and scholarships to these outstanding early-career researchers.
“The Society seeks to support all New Zealanders to explore, discover and share new knowledge. We look forward to hearing what these talented researchers uncover with their research.”
For 2019, the Royal Society Te Apārangi Rutherford Foundation has announced ten Postdoctoral Fellowships and one Cambridge-Rutherford Memorial PhD Scholarship.
Two-year New Zealand Postdoctoral Fellowships
have been awarded to:
• Dr Maedeh Amirpour, University
of Auckland, for research titled: Toward tailored 3D printed
bio-based human interfaces - rational design by predictive
modelling
• Dr Nick Brettell, Victoria
University of Wellington, for research titled: Matroids
representable over all fields of size at least
four
• Dr Emma Davison, University of
Auckland, for research titled: Automated flow technology for
the synthesis of personalised cancer
vaccines
• Dr Anna Gosling, University of
Otago, for research titled: Understanding the genetic
origins of gout and metabolic disease in Pacific
populations: an evolutionary approach
• Dr Lisa Hamm, University of
Auckland, for research titled: Learning to see: identifying
visual processing challenges through innovative assessment
tools
• Dr Azadeh Hashemi, University
of Canterbury, for research titled: Developing a simple and
effective method for directing the differentiation of stem
cells in the lab
• Dr Jay Jayaraman, Plant & Food
Research, for research titled: A strategy towards durable
kiwifruit immunity to Pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae
(Psa)
• Dr Rodrigo Martinez Gazoni,
University of Canterbury, for research titled: Novel and
easily-scalable metamaterials for energy and environmental
applications
• Dr Lisa Pilkington, University
of Auckland, for research titled: Data science QSAR
strategies and tools for medicinal
chemists
• Dr Brook Tozer, GNS Science,
for research titled: Improving New Zealand's hazard
resilience through seismic imaging of Earth’s most
dangerous faults.
The Rutherford Foundation
Postdoctoral Fellowship will enable recipients to undertake
full-time research programmes for 2 years within New Zealand
in any area of research, science and technology, including
social sciences and the humanities, at an eligible New
Zealand research institution. Each year, the Fellow will
receive a stipend of NZ$75,000 and NZ$10,000 (GST exclusive)
to support direct and indirect research costs.
Three-year Cambridge-Rutherford
Memorial PhD Scholarship has been awarded
to:
• Benson Chen, Emory University,
for research titled: Deep phenotyping and genotyping in
inherited optic neuropathies.
The Cambridge-Rutherford Memorial PhD Scholarships are jointly funded by the Cambridge Commonwealth, European and International Trust (CCEIT) and the Rutherford Foundation. The Scholarship pays a living allowance as well as course and college fees to enable recipients to complete a PhD at the University of Cambridge.
The Rutherford
Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowships and PhD Scholarships are
supported by New Zealand government funding and administered
by Royal Society Te Apārangi.
View
more on the latest Rutherford Foundation Postdoctoral
Fellowships and PhD Scholarship recipients: royalsociety.org.nz/rutherford-foundation/
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