BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES RESEARCH COUNCIL
Responsive Mode Grants
Values are the amounts requested. Awarded amounts may differ.
• Award winner: Jonathan Lee
• Institution: University of Birmingham
• Value: £397,000
Neural mechanisms of memory updating
• Award winner: Richard Lewis
• Institution: Newcastle University
• Value: £351,000
Phosphotransferases in bacterial cell wall biosynthesis
• Award winner: Karl Matter
• Institution: University College London
• Value: £484,000
The epithelial junction protein MarvelD3 in cell proliferation and migration
• Award winner: Stuart Wilson
• Institution: University of Sheffield
• Value: £437,000
The assembly and function of the TREX complex
• Award winner: Jeremy Green
• Institution: King's College London
• Value: £336,000
Cell polarity and phosphoinositide kinases in Wnt signalling
NATIONAL CENTRE FOR THE REPLACEMENT, REFINEMENT AND REDUCTION OF ANIMALS IN RESEARCH - NC3RS
Project Grants
• Award winner: Raymond Bujdoso
• Institution: University of Cambridge
• Value: £264,500
Use of PrP transgenic Drosophila to measure mammalian prion infectivity
• Award winner: Charlotte Hosie
• Institution: University of Chester
• Value: £289,404
Establishment of consensual husbandry protocols for laboratory Xenopus laevis using novel physiological and behavioural techniques
Pilot Study Grants
• Award winner: Gidona Goodman
• Institution: University of Edinburgh
• Value: £74,188
Investigation of behavioural and physiological responses to fin-clipping in zebrafish
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL RESEARCH COUNCIL
Successful Rising Powers and Interdependent Futures Research Grants
• Award winner: Kataryna Wolczuk
• Institution: University of Birmingham
• Value: £298,969
Russia and the EU in the common neighbourhood: export of governance and legal (in)compatibility
• Award winner: James Manor
• Institution: School of Advanced Study, University of London
• Value: £262,078
Expanding, not shrinking social programmes: the politics of new policies to tackle poverty and inequality in Brazil, India, China and South Africa.
IN DETAIL
Arts and Humanities Research Council
• Award winner: Gabor Thomas
• Institution: University of Reading
• Value: £554,228
Anglo-Saxon monastic landscapes: a reconstruction from Lyminge, Kent
The project's key objective is to pioneer a holistic approach to the archaeological examination of the site of a documented double monastery (a mixed-sex community presided over by a royal abbess) founded in the 7th century. To relate the core buildings of early medieval monastic communities to their wider landscape context, this project will generate a high-resolution reconstruction of the physical organisation and material practices of Lyminge's documented monastic community, tracked through space and time from the 6th to the 9th century.