Seven TCD Academics Receive SFI Principal Investigator Awards
Posted on: 02 July 2012
The Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation, Richard Bruton TD, announced funding for seven Trinity College Dublin flagship scientific research projects through Science Foundation Ireland’s Principal Investigator Programme on Friday June 29th last. Trinity secured seven out of 30 awards.
The overall €39 million investment for 30 Principal Investigators’ research teams will support 151 researchers through to 2015 working in areas identified by Government as key for developing new commercial products and services from scientific research, including ICT, health/life sciences and energy.
Speaking at the announcement in the Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute, Director-General of Science Foundation Ireland, Professor Mark Ferguson, said: “The PI projects for 2012, selected following a highly-competitive, peer-reviewed process, are investigating some of the most important issues facing humanity today”.
The Trinity College Dublin recipients of the Principal Investigator Awards include:
Professor Jonathan Coleman, School of Physics and CRANN
2D atomic crystal-nanoconductor hybrids: High conductivity nano-structured materials for energy applications
Dr Hongzhou Zhang, School of Physics and CRANN
Helium-ion microscopy for graphene-based nanodevices
Professor Andrew Bowie, School of Biochemistry and Immunology
Sensing and signalling in anti-viral innate immunity
Professor Pete Humphries and Professor Jane Farrar, School of Genetics
On Prevention of Degenerative Retinopathies
Professor Marina Lynch, School of Medicine and TCIN
Modulating microglial function and its impact on neuronal function
Professor Kingston Mills, School of Biochemistry and Immunology
New immunotherapeutic approaches based on the Th1/Th17 axis and its regulation
Dr James O’Donnell, School of Medicine
Defining the molecular mechanisms responsible for clearance of the von Willebrand factor – factor VIII complex