Grant winners – 19 January 2017

A round-up of academics awarded research council funding

一月 19, 2017
Grant winners tab on folder

Science and Technology Facilities Council

Research grants

The Ensonglopedia of Science


Tactile collider: an interactive event for the blind and partially sighted


Cosmic ray muon research in schools


National Institutes of Health Research

Research project grants

Health Services and Delivery Research

Organising general practice for care homes: a multi-method study


Interventions that improve maternity care and access for immigrant women in England: a narrative synthesis systematic review


Efficacy and Mechanism Evaluation

  • Award winner: Patricia Gooding
  • Institution: Manchester Mental Health and Social Care Trust
  • Value: £1,354,184

A psychological intervention for suicide applied to patients with psychology: the CARMS trials (cognitive approaches to remedying suicide)


A randomised controlled trial to evaluate the outcomes and mechanisms of a novel digital reasoning intervention for persecutory delusions


Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Research grants

Activation of non-photosynthetic leaf cells for improved productivity


Evolution of dosage compensation on recently evolved sex chromosomes


Lipid droplets in oocytes: shedding new light on why fats are good or bad for development


In detail

National Centre for the Replacement, Refinement and Reduction of Animals in Research

Fellowship

Award winner: David Turner
Institution: University of Cambridge
Value: £215,335

The establishment of left-right asymmetry in mammalian development

Humans and other mammals appear symmetrical, but under the skin are asymmetrical. The heart, for instance, is found on the left side of the body. Scientists do not yet understand the evolutionary reasons for our internal left-right asymmetry or the mechanisms behind its development. It is known that some conditions – including birth defects – can result from gene mutations that affect asymmetry, and therefore it would be helpful to understand the mechanisms by which asymmetry arises. At present, development of asymmetry can be studied only using expensive animal models. David Turner has created a new experimental method to study left-right asymmetry: this will involve growing, stimulating and multiplying the embryonic stem cells of mice until they show some embryonic characteristics. He will use these “gastruloids” to investigate the mechanisms that lead to left-right asymmetry in mammals.

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