University of Auckland Celebrates $19.8M from Marsden Fund
University of Auckland Celebrates $19.8 Million in Marsden Fund Awards
The University of Auckland is celebrating the success of 31 of its researchers and research groups whose projects have won $19.8 million in the Marsden Fund round.
Research at the University supported by the fund will address diverse topics including the origins of early life on earth; defending blood flow to the ‘selfish’ brain; a Māori archaeology of threatened rock art; building an ‘atlas’ of the human gut; and the impact of marketing ‘health’ to children.
“These awards recognise the high calibre of researchers at the University of Auckland as well as the quality and breadth of our research,” says Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research), Professor Jim Metson.
“The Marsden Fund supports the cutting-edge of new research which will lead to discoveries that shape our future. We congratulate our researchers for this recognition of their outstanding work.”
Thirteen research projects from the Faculty of Science received a total of $8.8 million. Among these, Professor Kathleen Campbell will carry out research to find early life in terrestrial hot springs.
Seven projects from the Faculty of Arts were awarded a total of $4.6 million. These include Dr Alice Mills who will study the role of stable housing in reducing re-offending by ex-prisoners. Dr Avril Bell will pursue research titled ‘Tāngata Tiriti: Learning the trick of standing upright here’.
Grants of $3 million were awarded to four research projects from the Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, including Dr Fiona McBryde who will investigate a pioneering technique measuring the dynamic relationship between blood pressure, sympathetic nerve activity and brain blood flow.
Grants worth a total of $1.5 million were awarded to three projects from the Faculty of Engineering, including for Dr Lihua Tang, for research into self-adaptive technologies to harvest electricity from environmental vibrations. Dr Xuyun Zhang will study versatile and efficient anomaly detection for fog computing applications.
The Auckland Bioengineering Institute was awarded two grants totalling $1.25 million, including for research by Associate Professor Leo Cheng titled: ‘An atlas of the gut: a framework for integrating structure to function’.
The Faculty of Education and Social Work and the James Henare Research Centre each won a grant of $300,000.
Applications to the Marsden Fund are highly competitive. This year the fund distributed $84.6 million to 133 research projects around the country.
Successful
projects from the University of Auckland are:
• Dr
Ethan Cochrane
Faculty of Arts
Land and Agriculture in
Ancient Samoa: Uncovering the Origins of the Polynesian
Chiefdoms
$720,000
• Dr Lihua Tang
Faculty
of Engineering
Self-adaptive vibration energy harvesting
based on nonlinear energy sink
$300,000
• Professor Kathleen Campbell
Faculty of
Science
Some Liked it Hot: Searching for Early Life in
Terrestrial Hot Springs
$958,000
• Pedram
Hekmati
Faculty of Science
Exploiting gauge theory and
duality in geometry
$300,000
• Dr Gerard
O’Regan
James Henare Research Centre
Initiating a
Māori archaeology of threatened North Island rock
art
$300,000
• Associate Professor Quentin
Atkinson
Faculty of Science
Political gaming: using
economic games to explore the foundations of political
ideology
$835,000
• Professor Joanna
Putterill
Faculty of Science
Functional analysis of
MtING2 – Uncovering an independent mechanism for control
of flowering by winter cold
$895,000
• Dr
Kristal Cain
Faculty of Science
The heart of song;
understanding the origins of vocal learning using New
Zealand’s missing link, the titipounamu or
rifleman
$300,000
• Dr Darren Powell
Faculty
of Education & Social Work
Consuming kids: The impact of
marketing 'health' to children
$300,000
• Associate Professor Claire Postlethwaite
Faculty
of Science
Noisy networks: understanding how
stochasticity affects mathematical models of cognitive
systems
$545,000
• Associate Professor Lisa
Bailey
Faculty of Arts
Servants of God, Slaves of the
Church: Rhetoric and Realities of Service in Early Medieval
Europe
$625,000
• Dr Hirini Kaa
Faculty of
Arts
The Young Māori Party: Leading Iwi into
Modernity
$300,000
• Dr Jeremy
Armstrong
Faculty of Arts
Blood and Money: The
Military Industrial Complex in Archaic Central
Italy
$635,000
• Associate Professor Igor
Klep
Faculty of Science
Free Analysis and its
Applications
$455,000
• Professor Christian
Hartinger
Faculty of Science
Blossoming of Bioinspired
Supramolecular Architectures: Towards Applications in
Catalysis, Drug Delivery and Materials
Science
$910,000
• Associate Professor Tim
Dare
Faculty of Arts
An Ethical Framework for Social
Policy Applications of Predictive Analytics
$635,000
• Professor Bryony James
Faculty of
Engineering
Why do texturally complex foods lead us to
eat less?
$945,000
• Dr Alice Mills
Faculty
of Arts
Going straight home? The role of stable housing
in reducing re-offending by ex-prisoners
$845,000
• Dr Matthew Egbert
Faculty of Science
Behaviour
Before Evolution? A transdisciplinary investigation into the
role of self-preserving behaviour at the origin of
life
$300,000
• Dr Fiona McBryde
Faculty of
Medical & Health Sciences
Defending blood flow to the
‘selfish’ brain
$959,000
• Dr Avril
Bell
Faculty of Arts
Tāngata Tiriti: Learning the
trick of standing upright here
$845,000
• Dr
Joanne Davidson
Faculty of Medical & Health
Sciences
Does ATP release contribute to perinatal brain
injury after ischaemia?
$300,000
• Dr Xuyun
Zhang
Faculty of Engineering
Versatile and Efficient
Anomaly Detection for Fog Computing
Applications
$300,000
• Professor Anthony
Poole
Faculty of Science
Rewiring life: using
synthetic biology and experimental evolution to unravel the
evolutionary origins of DNA
$850,000
• Associate Professor Nickola Overall
Faculty of
Science
Conflict recovery in families: Why inevitable
conflict does not have to be detrimental
$840,000
• Associate Professor Rachel Fewster
Faculty of
Science
Cells and whistles: supercharging our
biodiversity monitoring toolkit using genetic and acoustic
records
$680,000
• Dr Kenneth Tran
Auckland
Bioengineering Institute
Diagnosing the diabetic
heart
$300,000
• Dr Susan McGlashan
Faculty
of Medical & Health Sciences
Stiffness matters:
Unravelling the reciprocal relationship between tissue
mechanical stiffness and cellular
mechanosensitivity
$920,000
• Professor Richard
Easther
Faculty of Science
Ultralight Dark Matter:
Dynamics and Astrophysics
$910,000
• Professor
Peter Adams
Faculty of Medical & Health
Sciences
Shaping Public Policy - Mixed Methods Study of
Alcohol, Tobacco, Gambling and Food Industry Points of
Influence with Policy Makers
$825,000
• Associate Professor Leo Cheng
Auckland
Bioengineering Institute
An Atlas of the Gut: A Framework
for Integrating Structure to
Function
$950,000
ENDS