Otago secures major Marsden funding
Thursday 6 September 2007
Otago secures major Marsden
funding
University of Otago researchers have gained
major funding to undertake leading-edge research in the
latest Marsden round announced today.
More than a quarter of this year’s $44m pool was allocated to Otago researchers to undertake 20 projects. The University’s share was the largest of any institution.
Researchers at the University will investigate areas ranging from the origin of our solar system, to a potential HIV therapy, to the history of interracial marriage in New Zealand.
Other projects include improving eyewitnesses’ identification of suspects in photo line-ups and the role a hormone called MIS may play in boys’ behaviour.
Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) Professor Geoff White congratulated the Otago researchers on their well-earned success in the prestigious funding round.
“Marsden funding is extremely competitive nationally - only 10 per cent of the initial applications were eventually funded this year. For Otago’s applications, the success rate was 12.5 per cent.
“Our researchers’ outstanding performance reflects the excellence of the proposals they put forward. Their success rate is an important quality measure that reinforces Otago’s status as New Zealand’s top-ranked university for research,” says Professor White.
The researchers, from across the University’s Divisions of Health Sciences, Humanities, and Sciences, gained 17 contracts and three Fast-Start grants in the round.
The three Fast-Starts provide important support for promising projects by emerging researchers at Otago and are very welcome, says Professor White.
ENDS
Otago’s Marsden recipients:
Dr John
Ashton (Pharmacology and Toxicology) – Do cannabinoids
heal the inflamed brain? The role of cannabinoid CB2
receptors in neurodegeneration and repair
$250,000
over three years
Dr Peter Dearden (Biochemistry) – The
molecular basis of royalty
$782,000 over three
years
Dr Richard Edwards (Public Health, University of
Otago Wellington) – Pursuing the endgame for the tobacco
industry: daring to dream
$387,729 over two
years
Professor Allan Herbison (Physiology) –
Understanding calcium oscillations in GnRH neurons
$732,000 over three years
Dr Julia Horsfield
(Pathology) – When development comes unstuck:
investigating chromosome cohesion syndromes in zebrafish
$844,000 over three years
Professor Keith Hunter
(Chemistry) – Southern Ocean biogeochemistry: calibrating
the cadmium paleo-proxy
$780,000 over three
years
Assoc Prof Henrik Kjaergaard (Chemistry) –
Phosphorus in the atmosphere
$540,000 over three
years
Dr Richard Macknight (Biochemistry) –
Identification and characterisation of imprinted genes in
plants
$720,000 over three years
Assoc Prof Ian
McLennan (Anatomy & Structural Biology) – Is boyhood
shaped by MIS?
$728,000 over three years
Dr Elizabeth
Poole (Biochemistry) – A human gene using an expression
strategy of HIV-1: function and implications for antiviral
therapy
$636,000 over three years
Assoc Prof Tony Poole
(Medical and Surgical Sciences) – The primary cilium and
mechanosensation: a novel approach to understanding kidney
fibrosis
$860,000 over three years
Professor Robert
Poulin, Dr Devon Keeney (Zoology) – What makes a
jack-of-all-trades: constraints on host specificity of
parasites
$774,000 over three years
Dr Takashi
Shogimen (History) – The Idea of Peace in the Age of
Crusades
$242,000 over three years
Dr Claudine
Stirling (Chemistry) – Supernova explosion or colliding
cosmic clouds: reconciling the origin of our Solar System
$330,000 over three years
Professor Warren Tate
(Biochemistry) – A structural basis for decoding mRNA stop
signals and mediating polypeptide release in protein
synthesis
$704,000 over three years
Assoc Prof Richard
Walter (Anthropology) – The first hundred years. The
archaeology of New Zealand’s cultural origins
$693,000
over three years
Dr Angela Wanhalla (History) – Colonial
intimacies, intimate colonialism: a history of interracial
marriage in New Zealand
$165,000 over two years
Dr Jon
Waters (Zoology) – Rafting communities in the West Wind
Drift: the importance of buoyant kelp
$808,000 over
three years
Dr Megan Wilson (Biochemistry) – The
maternal blueprint: discovering novel patterning mechanisms
in the Honeybee oocyte – Fast Start
$170,000 over two
years
Dr Rachel Zajac (Psychology) – “That’s him!”
Reducing mistaken identifications in photographic lineups -
Fast-Start
$170,000 over two
years