Grant winners – 23 June 2016

A round-up of recent recipients of research council cash

六月 23, 2016
Grant winners tab on folder

Leverhulme Trust

Research Project Grants
Sciences

Progress in Kohn Sham electronic structure theory from a wave function approach


The nature and consequences of historic and future ocean acidification; insights from boron isotopes in corals


Blue-emitting TADF materials for OLEDs based on a Lewis acid-containing acceptor


Humanities

Plural mass nouns as a window to linguistic variation


Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Research grants

New enzymatically produced interpenetrating starch-cellulose gels


  • Award winner: Catherine Holloway
  • Institution: University College London
  • Value: £99,424

Power-up! Fuelling a new generation of assistive technologies


CO2 shipping-compression, liquefaction and dehydration (CO2 LIQUID)


Economic and Social Research Council

Research grants

The kinds of poverty in schools and their impact on student progress


Delineating self-other processes in social cognition: insights from neuropsychology and brain stimulation


In detail

Award winner: Gillian Rose
Institution: Open University
Value: £750,000

Smart cities in the making: learning from Milton Keynes

This project will study the impact and engagement of “smart cities”. Smart cities use data from digital technologies to enhance sustainability, economic growth and openness. With more than half of UK cities undertaking smart projects, the team hopes that the findings will ensure smart city developments are accessible to as many people as possible. This study will focus on Milton Keynes and will explore what kinds of users, citizens and consumers are likely to be embraced by smart policies, technologies and visions. “Although local community and citizen participation is a prerequisite for a successful smart city, almost nothing is known about how smart policies and technologies actually engage city residents and workers,” said Gillian Rose, project lead and professor of cultural geography at the Open University. “Who are smartphone apps designed for and what social needs do they ignore? What kind of populations are described by smart data hubs, and who do policies using such data therefore address? Many are concerned that smart activity may well not reach socially marginalised groups and individuals, for example, and that it might therefore contribute to increased levels of social polarisation in cities between the digital ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’.” The project will allow the researchers the opportunity to answer these questions.

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