Professor David Parry Awarded Rutherford Medal
Announcement from the Royal Society of New Zealand
STRICTLY EMBARGOED until 10.30 p.m. Tuesday 11
November 2008
Professor David Parry, Massey University, Awarded Rutherford Medal For Science
The 2008 Rutherford Medal for Science and Technology, New Zealand’s top science award, was presented to Distinguished Professor David Parry of Massey University at the Science Honours Dinner in Wellington last night. Three hundred and eighty scientists from around New Zealand gathered at Te Papa for the announcement of this and other science and technology awards. Ernest Rutherford’s great granddaughter, Professor Mary Fowler, a geophysicist at the University of London, presented the medal to Professor Parry. Professor Fowler is beginning a lecture tour* of New Zealand as the Royal Society of New Zealand’s Distinguished Speaker, celebrating 100 years since Ernest Rutherford received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry.
As a structural
biophysicist, Professor Parry works at the boundary between
physics and biology. His research has focussed on the
fibrous proteins that constitute the bulk of the proteins in
the human body and which enable it to move. Amongst the
problems that have been tackled successfully are the
structure of hair and skin in health and disease, the manner
in which muscles are turned on and off, the mechanics of
skin and tendons, the transparency of the cornea in the eye,
how proteins can be designed from simple building blocks to
give desired structures and functions, and how hair/wool can
provide thermo-regulation and protection against predators.
This has led to major advances in our understanding of these
systems. Aspects of Professor Parry’s work have been
applied in the wool and meat industries, in surgical
procedures as well as in physiology and medicine.
Fibrous proteins are large and very complex molecules. Determining their structure, organization and modes of function has proved extremely challenging since X-ray crystallographic techniques that have been widely applied to other proteins are generally inapplicable for fibrous ones. Such research, however, is vital if an understanding is to be achieved of human biology in its widest sense.
Professor Parry has also served New Zealand and international scientific organisations with distinction. He is a former President of the International Union for of Pure and Applied Biophysics, and was recently the Vice-President for Scientific Planning and Review of the Paris-based International Council for Science, where he led the development of the Strategic Plan for World Science for the current six-year period. .
Mr Neville Jordan, President of the Royal Society of New Zealand which awards the medal on behalf of government, said, “David Parry is not just a successful scientist, whose work has had many useful, practical results; he plays a distinguished role in the international science community and has given a lot of his time for the wider benefit of New Zealand science.”
Dr Ross Ihaka of The University of Auckland
received the top award for achievement in technology, the
Pickering Medal, awarded by the Royal Society of New
Zealand.
He has developed a software package for
statisticians called R, which has had huge uptake by
universities, industry and government. R can be downloaded
free, is easy to use, and can be readily customised for
different applications. It is invaluable for major “data
crunching” tasks such as processing genomic information.
The inaugural Dame Joan Metge (pron Metch) Award for Social Science was shared by paediatrician scientist Professor Diana Lennon, The University of Auckland, and public health researcher Professor Philippa Howden-Chapman, University of Otago School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Wellington. Professor Lennon is an expert on infectious childhood diseases in children and Dr Howden-Chapman is well known for her research into the beneficial effects of warmer, drier homes on health. The award was presented by Dame Joan herself. For this work, Professor Howden-Chapman also received the Liley Medal, awarded by the Health Research Council, jointly with Professor Ted Baker from The University of Auckland.
A summary list of awards followed by the full citations are at the end of this release.
*Details of Professor Mary Fowler’s lecture tour, including biographical notes and a description of her talk, are at www.royalsociety.org.nz
2008 Science
Honours Dinner
Summary list of awards, followed by full list with descriptions of the award and citations.
Dame
Joan Metge Medal
Awardees: Professor Diana Lennon,
Department of Paediatrics, The University of
Auckland
Professor Philippa Howden-Chapman, University of
Otago, Wellington School of Medicine and Health
Sciences
Gold Crest Awards
Awardees: Jessie Lineham,
James Hargest High and Emma Adlam, Auckland Diocesan School
for Girls
Roger Slack Award
Awardee: Dr Tina
Summerfield, Biochemistry Department, University of
Otago
Fonterra Prize for Industrial and Applied
Chemistry
Awardee: Associate Professor Simon Hall,
Institute of Fundamental Sciences, Massey University
New
Zealand Marine Sciences Society Award
Awardee: Dr Malcolm
Francis, NIWA, Wellington
McKenzie Award for educational
research
Awardee: Emeritus Professor John Codd (late),
Massey University
NZ Mathematical Society Research
Award
Awardee: Professor Michael Hendy, Institute of
Fundamental Sciences and Allan Wilson Centre, Massey
University
Dan Walls Medal for international recognition
in physics research
Awardee: Professor Paul Callaghan,
Victoria University of Wellington
Cooper Medal for
research in physics or engineering
Awardees: Industrial
Research Limited Superconductor Cable Team: Dr Nicholas
Long, Dr Rod Badcock, Mr Peter Beck, Mr Marc Mulholland, Mr
Nigel Ross, Dr Michael Staines, Dr Henry Sun, Dr James
Hamilton and Dr Robert Buckley
The Royal Society of New
Zealand Manhire Prize for Creative Science
Writing
Awardees: Non-fiction – Will Catton, University
of Otago; Fiction – Dave Armstrong, freelance writer and
producer
Liley Medal
Awardees: Professor Edward (Ted)
Baker, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, The
University of Auckland; Professor Philippa Howden-Chapman,
University of Otago, Wellington School of Medicine and
Health Sciences
Pickering Medal
Awardee: Associate
Professor Ross Ihaka, Department of Statistics, The
University of Auckland
Thomson Medal
Awardee: Dr
Andrew West, Chief Executive, AgResearch
Rutherford Medal
for Science and Technology
Awardee: Distinguished
Professor David Parry, Massey University
Full details:
Dame Joan Metge Medal
For contributions to
capacity building, beneficial relationships with research
participants, mentoring of new researchers, and
contributions to new knowledge.
Awarded by the Royal
Society of New Zealand.
Awardees:
Professor Diana
Lennon, Department of Paediatrics, The University of
Auckland
Professor Philippa Howden-Chapman, University of
Otago, Wellington School of
Medicine and Health
Sciences
Citations
Professor Diana Lennon is a
first-class paediatrician scientist, whose research has made
a major impact on the lives of New Zealand children. In
addition to her highly-cited research, Professor Lennon has
also played an important role in building capacity in the
child health workforce, especially for Maori and Pacific
people. She has generated a great deal of new knowledge
which has had direct benefit for New Zealand children by
saving lives and reducing hospital admissions and long-term
disabilities. Professor Lennon has been involved in the
promotion of the meningococcal vaccine initiative and she
has conducted a large study investigating sore throat
management in schools to prevent rheumatic fever.
Professor Philippa Howden-Chapman has had an extremely successful academic career. Her research has had a major impact on our understanding of the link between housing, energy and health. Professor Howden-Chapman has a sustained record of mentoring new researchers and she is the director of two multidisciplinary research teams, the Housing and Health Programme and the Centre for Sustainable Cities. Both of these research groups develop practical solutions to complex problems involving housing and health. Professor Howden-Chapman has devoted her career to developing new ways to reduce inequalities in New Zealand and her research has led to major Government investment in more sustainable housing.
Gold Crest Awards
To encourage innovation and
creativity in problem solving.
Awarded by the Royal
Society of New Zealand.
Awardees: Jessie Lineham, James
Hargest High, Invercargill, and Emma Adlam, Auckland
Diocesan School for Girls
Citations:
Jessie Lineham has
been awarded a Gold CREST for her three year project
investigating the effects of riparian planting on a farm
stream. This was a complex project with long-term benefits
for generations to come.
Emily Adlam has been awarded a Gold CREST for her project analysing the usefulness of three kinds of domestic power generation: solar, wind, and rain. Her recommendation is that solar power has the greatest potential for producing household energy in urban areas.
Roger Slack Award
In recognition of an
outstanding contribution to the study of plant biology by a
young scientist.
Awarded by the New Zealand Society of
Plant Biologists.
Awardee: Dr Tina Summerfield,
Biochemistry Department, University of
Otago
Citation:
Dr Tina Summerfield studies the
symbiosis between bacteria, fungi and plants. Her current
research combines ecological and molecular biological tools
to explore the diversity of New Zealand’s cyanobacteria
and their potential as a source of biofuels. Dr
Summerfield, a FRST (Foundation for Research, Science and
Technology) postdoctoral fellow, is shortly to take up a
lectureship in Botany at Otago University where she will
focus on using cyanobacteria for the production of
biohydrogen.
Fonterra Prize for Industrial and Applied
Chemistry
To acknowledge achievement in the field of
industrial or applied chemistry.
Awarded by the New
Zealand Institute of Chemistry.
Awardee: Associate
Professor Simon Hall, Institute of Fundamental Sciences,
Massey University
Citation:
The success of Associate
Professor Simon Hall is based on a rare combination of
talents. Few others have been brave enough to step out of
the academic environment and take the risks necessary to
commercialise their findings. This award recognises his
substantial achievement in driving the research and
development of a rechargeable nickel-zinc battery, from
discovery in the laboratory through to establishing
manufacturing agreements with overseas investors and
manufacturers.
New Zealand Marine Sciences Society
Award
In recognition of continued outstanding
contribution in the advancement of marine
sciences.
Awarded by the New Zealand Marine Sciences
Society.
Awardee:
Dr Malcolm Francis, NIWA ,
Wellington
Citation:
Dr Malcolm Francis is a fisheries
biologist and ecologist and is New Zealand's premier shark
researcher As an active and highly productive scientific
researcher, diver and underwater photographer for more than
30 years, he has made a huge contribution to both New
Zealand and Pacific marine science Dr Francis is widely
published in both scientific and popular literature; the
combination of his broad scientific knowledge and stunning
underwater photography has contributed greatly to public
appreciation and understanding of New Zealand's natural
history.
McKenzie Award
For educational
research.
Awarded by the New Zealand Association for
Research in Education.
Awardee:
Emeritus Professor
John Codd (late), Massey University
Citation:
The late
Professor John Codd has a distinguished record as a scholar
of national and international repute. His scholarship and
research in the area of education policy has been
consistently excellent over many years and has provided the
basis for intelligent analysis of education reforms in New
Zealand.
Professor Codd was a scholar of integrity. During his time in the university, and more recently in positions of responsibility in management and governance, Professor Codd attempted to put into practice the principles he presented in his academic work. His strongly held view was that one of the cornerstone functions of the university was to be the critic and conscience of society. He never lost sight of the underpinning values of education and his views were not simply rhetoric, they were based on years of careful research and scholarship.
NZ Mathematical Society
Research Award
To recognise excellence in mathematical
research.
Awarded by the New Zealand Mathematical
Society.
Awardee:
Professor Michael Hendy, Institute
of Fundamental Sciences and Allan Wilson Centre, Massey
University
Citation:
Professor Michael Hendy uses an
innovative mathematical approach to molecular ecology and
evolution and has transformed the field. His research is
now an integral part of phylogenetic software
internationally and has contributed to the solution of
several fundamental problems.
Professor Hendy's founding and co-directorship of the Allan Wilson Centre has led to a burgeoning of all aspects of the study of evolution in New Zealand. The work of the Centre plays an important role in the relationship of New Zealanders to their natural taonga. Researchers have used Professor Hendy's mathematical foundations to analyse the DNA of native birds and make profound contributions to our views of the evolution of our fauna.
Dan Walls Medal
To acknowledge a physicist
working in New Zealand, whose research has had great impact
both nationally and internationally.
Awarded by the New
Zealand Institute of Physics.
Awardee:
Professor Paul
Callaghan, Victoria University of
Wellington
Citation:
Professor Paul Callaghan is a
world leader in the field of nuclear magnetic resonance, a
field which he has worked in for nearly forty years,
publishing over two hundred papers in this and related
research areas. Professor Callaghan’s research has
particularly focused on developing NMR methods for studying
molecular dynamics and organisation in various types of
materials from polymers to biological tissue. Professor
Callaghan has received many national and international
awards recognising his research, communication and science
leadership contributions. It is entirely fitting that he be
the inaugural recipient of the Dan Walls medal.
Cooper
Medal
For research in physics or engineering.
Awarded
by the Royal Society of New Zealand.
Awardee:
IRL
Superconductor Cable Team: Dr Nicholas Long, Dr Rod Badcock,
Mr Peter Beck, Mr Marc Mulholland, Mr Nigel Ross, Dr Michael
Staines, Dr Henry Sun, Dr James Hamilton and Dr Robert
Buckley
Citation:
The 2008 Cooper Medal has been
awarded for research to develop a commercial process for the
manufacture of a superconductor cable. This has significant
potential economic benefit to New Zealand.
The recipients are: Nicholas Long, Rod Badcock, Michael Staines, Henry Sun, James Hamilton, Robert Buckley, Peter Beck, Marc Mulholland and Nigel Ross.
This group has a practical method for the manufacture of narrow strand YBCO Roebel cable used in the high current windings of generators and transformers. A joint venture between Industrial Research Limited and General Cable Corporation is establishing a prototype facility in Christchurch to manufacture this cable.
The Royal Society of New Zealand Manhire Prize for
Creative Science Writing
Awarded jointly by the Royal
Society of New Zealand, New Zealand Listener and
International Institute of Modern Letters, Victoria
University of Wellington.
The topic this year was
evolution: all shortlisted entries are at
www.royalsociety.org.nz
Judged this year by Bernard
Beckett, teacher and writer
Awardees:
Non-fiction:
Will Catton, PhD student, University of Otago
Fiction:
Dave Armstrong, freelance writer and producer
Comments on
winning entries by Bernard Beckett:
Fiction Category:
Waimate, by Dave Armstrong
The strength of this piece was
its rather oblique response to the posted topic. Whereas
many made the mistake of trying, in a work of fiction, to
confront the topic and its implications, this piece rather
used it as a stepping off point from which a story could
unfold. In this way it avoided becoming didactic, rather
than having something it urgently wanted to tell us it was
content to quietly reveal an aspect of a family relationship
through a simple trip to an old mission house. The house of
course has a link to Darwin, and to the family, and these
echoes are further crafted through the father being a
biology teacher. The key thing though is the crafting; these
details, the entries from Darwin's journal, and the glimpses
of scientific discussions all sit naturally within the text.
At the end of this story the lingering impressions are of summers past, of a gently combative parental relationship, of a growing boy's respect for his father. And this is just as it should be. There are lovely hints of a rationalist's collision with a religious tradition, but they are cleverly kept as just hints. The little boy jumping up and down on the graves, shouting 'but we're atheists' is a perfectly formed detail, and typical of the touches that set this story apart.
Non-fiction Category: Progress, Laughter,
Sex, by Will Catton
I loved the sheer exuberance of this
piece. Non-fiction of this type it seems to me should be
both entertaining and informing, and that's a tricky
balance. Here the writer has managed to sustain a carefully
structured argument, yet do it in a way that it never feels
as if you are simply being informed. It is the enthusiasm
for the subject matter, along with a clever turn of phrase
that achieves this effect.
I was also much taken with the sense of play that quite appropriately pervades the writing. Lined up against a selection of work that sought to reprimand humanity for its evil ways, here at last was a piece that managed to celebrate the human miracle; to acknowledge that yes, we are animals too, part of a fragile, delicate eco-system and all that, but hell we're something more. We're animals that wonder, dream, ponder and ultimately have a laugh. I was cheering along on the sidelines as the case developed, for here was a piece of writing that spoke directly to my prejudices; a stroke of luck for the writer, and for me.
Liley Medal
To
recognise research that has made an outstanding contribution
to health and medical sciences.
Awarded by the Health
Research Council of New Zealand.
Awardees:
Professor
Edward Baker, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, The
University of Auckland
Professor Philippa Howden-Chapman,
University of Otago, Wellington School of Medicine and
Health Sciences
Citations:
Professor Edward Baker of
The University of Auckland, for his research in the field of
molecular structure. Professor Baker’s research,
published in the journal Science, described, for the first
time, the atomic structure of protein assemblies called pili
on gram positive bacterial surfaces. These structures are
integral to the way in which the bacteria adhere to cells,
and influence the infectivity and virulence of the
organisms.
The study also elucidated the importance of a previously unrecognised type of intramolecular isopeptide bond, that provides an unusual degree of strength and stability in the fine pilus structure. The new understanding derived from this study is likely to enhance vaccine development for an organism which causes a range of significant human infections.
Professor Philippa
Howden-Chapman led the landmark Housing Insulation and
Health Study that showed people’s health could be
transformed by keeping homes warm and dry. The study showed
that insulation provided a significantly warmer, drier
environment which resulted in improved health; fewer sick
days off work, GP visits and hospital admissions for
respiratory conditions. There have been calls for the study
to be reproduced around the world.
Pickering
Medal
To recognise excellence and innovation in the
practical application of technology.
Awarded by the Royal
Society of New Zealand.
Awardee:
Associate Professor
Ross Ihaka, Department of Statistics, The University of
Auckland
Citation:
Associate Professor Ross Ihaka is
one the originators of R, a software package for statistical
computing that has had phenomenal uptake internationally.
It can be downloaded free and easily customised for a very
wide variety of applications. The package and the paper
introducing it have been cited over 1700 times, by far the
highest for publications in the mathematical sciences over
the last ten years, worldwide. It is now disseminated from
over 75 internet sites in 30 countries.
The package is used both for teaching and research by hundreds of universities around the world, including Stanford, Oxford, Cambridge and Berkeley. There are over 40 books written about, or featuring, the use of R.
Thomson Medal
For
outstanding and inspirational leadership in the management
of science.
Awarded by the Royal Society of New
Zealand.
Awardee:
Dr Andrew West, Chief Executive,
AgResearch
Citation:
Dr Andrew West became Chief
Executive of AgResearch in March 2004. He was formerly
fulltime Chair of the Tertiary Education Commission and came
to AgResearch with an impressive record in science
management, policy development and strategic planning. In
the early 1990s, he played a major role in the Government's
science reforms, including the design and establishment of
MoRST and FoRST, Crown Research Institutes and the Crown
Company Monitoring Advisory Unit (CCMAU). He was also
Science Advisor to the Minister of Research, Science and
Technology working closely with cabinet ministers during the
reforms.
Rutherford Medal
For an exceptional
contribution to New Zealand society in science and
technology. The Rutherford Medal is the highest award
instituted by the Royal Society of New Zealand at the
request of the Government to honour those who have made
exceptional contributions to New Zealand in the field of
science and technology. It recognises a significant
contribution to the advancement and promotion of public
awareness, knowledge and understanding in addition to
eminent research or technological practice.
Awarded by
the Royal Society of New Zealand on behalf of the New
Zealand Government.
Awardee:
Distinguished Professor
David Parry
Citation:
Professor David Parry is a
leading authority in the field of Biophysics. His research
in fibrous
proteins has led to major advances in
understanding the structure of hair, the working
of
muscles and connective tissue, and how the shape of
proteins affects their function. His work has found
application in the wool and beauty industries as well as in
physiology and
medicine. Professor Parry has served New
Zealand and international scientific organisations with
distinction. He is a former President of the International
Union of Pure and Applied
Biophysics, and was recently a
Vice-President of the International Council for Science.
ends