Leverhulme Trust
Research fellowships
Humanities
- Award winner: Rebecca Clifford
- Institution: Swansea University
- Value: £39,297
Child survivors of genocide: making sense of memory
- Award winner: Christina Alt
- Institution: University of St Andrews
- Value: £44,055
Modernist roots: early ecology and modernist literature in Britain, 1900-1945
Research project grants
Sciences
- Award winner: Claire Cousins
- Institution: University of St Andrews
- Value: £165,903
Frozen but not forgotten: microbial habitability and preservation in planetary fluids
- Award winner: Anthony Kenyon
- Institution: University College London
- Value: £331,470
Understanding and controlling dynamic functional oxides
National Institute for Health Research
Health Technology Assessment programme
- Award winner: David Preiss
- Institution: University of Oxford
- Value: £1,789,595
A randomised placebo-controlled clinical trial of fenofibrate to prevent progression of non-proliferative retinopathy in diabetes (LENS: lowering events in non-proliferative retinopathy in Scotland)
- Award winner: Jonathan Bisson
- Institution: Cardiff University
- Value: £1,152,848
Pragmatic randomised controlled trial of a trauma-focused guided self-help programme versus individual trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder (RAPID-TFCBT)
- Award winner: Katherine Froggatt
- Institution: Lancaster University
- Value: £536,459
The Namaste Care intervention to improve the quality of dying for people with advanced dementia living in care homes: a realist review and feasibility study for a cluster randomised controlled trial
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Research grants
- Award winner: Claire Davis
- Institution: University of Warwick
- Value: £752,408
ASSURE 2 – advanced steel shaping using reduced energy
- Award winner: Gareth Conway
- Institution: Queen’s University Belfast
- Value: £100,046
Adaptive multiple propagating mode wearable antennas
In detail
Senior fellowship
Award winner: Gordon Blair
Institution: Lancaster University
Value: £2,503,460
The role of digital technologies in understanding, mitigating and adapting to environmental change
While cities have capitalised on the internet of things (IoT) and cloud computing to change the ways urbanites live and work, there has been little capitalisation on the natural world. This fellowship will aim to discover new ways of enabling the countryside to reap the benefits of the digital age. It will focus on three major areas of digital innovation – the IoT, cloud computing and data science – and examine how digital data can inform land management, support food security and tackle biodiversity loss. “Technology’s...role in managing environmental change is significantly under-developed,” says Gordon Blair, distinguished professor of distributed systems at Lancaster University. “For example, the internet of things has the potential to provide rich, real-time data for the natural environment at a scale previously unimaginable. Science has a crucial role in interpreting the torrent of complex information we can now capture, but to do this science has to change.”