Source: Francisco Negroni/Getty
The Wellcome Trustās groundbreaking Investigator Awards may be consciously focused on supporting the best tenured biomedical researchers, but the trustās director, Sir Mark Walport, is keen to emphasise that they are āawards rather than rewardsā.
The trust took the decision in 2009 to replace its previous grant schemes after reflecting on researchersā gripes about the grant application treadmill and the common āgamingā of the system.
In an interview with 51³Ō¹Ļ to coincide with this weekās announcement of the first beneficiaries of the Ā£56 million programme, Sir Mark said that the trust had concluded that the way to enable the best science was āto support the brightest minds and give them the flexibility to identify important research questions and the resources, including the time, to make a substantial contributionā.
Hence, the Investigator Awards are longer and larger - up to about Ā£3 million - than traditional grants, and successful principal investigators can use them to tackle any important question within the trustās remit to achieve āextraordinary improvements in human and animal healthā.
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āApplicants were asking for grants for up to seven years and no one could even attempt to say what they would be doing after years two or three, so the funding decision was based much more on the strength of their vision and approach,ā Sir Mark explained.
Decisions were also informed to a greater extent than previously by applicantsā track records - although Sir Mark insisted their career stage was always borne in mind, meaning senior researchers did not automatically have a huge advantage.
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He described the application process as ārigorous and fairā: applicants were asked to āidentify the question they wanted to tackle and how they would go about itā in a ārather shorter application than people are used to writingā.
Shortlisted applications were peer reviewed and their authors were interviewed by selection panels of international experts.
No duplication
Critics have claimed that the size of the awards increases the opportunity for top researchers to rack up funding and grow overly large groups.
Sir Mark agreed that there ācomes a point at which a lab becomes so big that principal investigators lose control of what is going onā and said the trust had sought to assure itself that āwhat we were providing was core and was not duplicating what (applicants) already haveā.
However, he admitted that some of the successful applicants have other funding streams, and said the trust āwouldnāt dreamā of discouraging them from applying for more: āIf they have the capacity and facilities to attack a number of questions well, then why notā
But he noted that some āvery seniorā applicants had been turned down while others had been given shorter awards than they had asked for. Seven of the inaugural awards have been made in the ānew investigatorā category for early career researchers.
āAnyone who looks at the list from inside science will recognise some names and others they wonāt know at all,ā he said.
The trustās focus on funding the best science means Sir Mark is relaxed about the fact that the trust will be financing fewer principal investigators than under its previous grant scheme.
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Nor is he worried that 21 of the first recipients of Investigator Awards are from the āgolden triangleā of Oxford, Cambridge and London - although he admitted that as a matter of national policy, āoverconcentration geographically is not a good thingā.
Worries on that topic were provoked by the research councilsā recent announcement in their delivery plans of similar changes to their grant programmes.
But Sir Mark declined to comment on the councils beyond emphasising that the trust worked closely with them to make sure that UK research remained āgreater than the sum of its partsā.
Around the time of last yearās Comprehensive Spending Review, Sir Mark publicly observed that the trustās mission did not tie it irrevocably to the UK. Some took that as a warning that it might divert its spending abroad if the government slashed the research budget, but Sir Mark denied that that had been a live option.
āWhile the UK is as good as it is, we are able very effectively to spend our funds here and all the signs are it is going to remain strong,ā he said.
Describing the CSR settlement as āfar better than it could have beenā, he urged the UKās academic community to abandon its āglass- half-emptyā mentality and āget on and deliverā.
But he insisted that this did not mean focusing exclusively on translational research, and noted that the majority of Investigator Awards did not āimmediately have translational implicationsā.
āEveryone knows answering quite basic questions gives unpredictable answers that may turn out to be extremely important,ā he said.
But he added that delivering did mean concentrating on important questions.
āThe tools of science are so powerful it is terribly important you donāt waste them on trivial matters,ā he said.
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