Dundee Scores Double Win at BBSRC Awards

Press Release | University of Dundee | April 3, 2011

The University of Dundee issued the following news release: The University of Dundee has won two of the three major prizes at the 2011 BBSRC (Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council) Impact Awards.

The College of Life Sciences at Dundee won the award for 'Greatest delivery of impact' while Professor Jason Swedlow was named 'Innovator of the Year'.

BBSRC is the UK funding agency for research in the life sciences and the largest single public funder of agriculture and food-related research. The Impact Awards are highly prized in the UK research community.

Winners and runners up of this year's awards were announced at an event in London with a speech and prize giving by Minister of State for Universities and Science, David Willetts MP.

'Bioscience is a key growth sector,' said Mr Willetts. 'These awards recognise the impact of bioscience both on the economy and society, through driving innovation, training highly-skilled people, improving businesses and public services and attracting foreign investment.' In looking at 'Greatest delivery of impact', the judges said of the College of Life Sciences, 'This department was felt to have achieved an extraordinary range of significant impacts from their research. The department's research had led to wide ranging and tangible achievements of both social and economic benefit. It had an impressive number of staff engaged in enterprise activities, and had clearly understood how to incentivise, recognise and reward staff for their impact activities.' Professor Pete Downes, Principal of the University of Dundee, said, 'The University of Dundee has always held our regional responsibilities as one of its key priorities. This is not simply about linking with local industry but also about engaging with international business, helping attract inward investment and building a wider economic base around what is taking place within the University.

'The building of the life sciences 'cluster' around Dundee, centred on the internationally renowned research taking place here, is a great example of how we have achieved this. Life sciences now accounts for around 15% of the local economy in Dundee and the surrounding area.

'These awards from the BBSRC further boost our determination to turn out graduates and carry out research which will carry this impact forward into the future.' Professor Swedlow, based in the College of Life Sciences, was named Innovator of the Year 2011 for his work on the Open Microscopy Environment (OME) - a revolutionary venture into open source software.

The ethos of OME is "share and share alike". With this approach Professor Swedlow and colleagues are rapidly catalysing the path of discovery for all bioscience researchers who generate and use imaging technology as part of their work. This includes research to identify biological structures, examine animal behaviour, monitor the mechanism of action of a new drug, or any of a great number of imaging practices.

As an open source, community-led consortium, OME is now the leading provider of software solutions for biological image management. Central to their success has been the development and uptake of a standard image format that can be used across a range of different microscopy platforms and allow researchers to share data in an open image data repository.

The judges' view was that the impact of OME was of remarkably wide benefit due to the flexibility and openness of the approach. The business model is very clever and allows for open source software development - as in, for example, Linux, Java, OS X and Mozilla's internet explorer, Firefox - and at the same time commercial opportunities are possible by licensing platforms based on the software. Two such platforms from OME are Bio-Formats and OMERO. In this way there are both economic and social impacts from the work.

Professor Swedlow said "It is a great honour to accept this award. The support we have received from BBSRC, as well as the Wellcome Trust, during the early stages of the research has been invaluable.

"Our vision has always been to create a global standard for imaging software and the community that has grown up around the open source development is extraordinary. In reality I am receiving this award on behalf of a large group of extremely talented people who share a common commitment to innovation through team work, collaboration and the process of creating something new and exciting as a community." Professor Swedlow also won the category prize for Social Innovator of the Year. He receives a 10,000 Pounds award as Innovator of the Year.

The College of Life Sciences receives 150,000 Pounds for the department award, money which will be reinvested to support it's impact activities. This may include sharing best practice, facilitating collaboration with end-users, and providing training in relevant skills.

About BBSRC Impact Awards Innovator of the Year and the Excellence with Impact awards recognise individual and institutional commitment to realising the social and economic potential of excellent research.

Innovator of the Year has been awarded twice previously, in 2009 and 2010. Prize money in 2011 totals 20,000 Pounds with two category winners receiving 5,000 Pounds and one category winner who is also awarded the title of Innovator of the Year receiving 10,000 Pounds. The award is to be spent at the winners discretion to support their research, training or other activities promoting economic or social impact, providing it falls within BBSRC's sphere of interest.

The Excellence with Impact award competition began in December 2008 and ran over a two year period. On 24 March 2011 BBSRC will award a total of 300,000 Pounds to the bioscience departments that are embedding a culture that recognises the importance of deriving economic and social impact from excellent research. One award will go to the department that has been most effective in introducing a significant culture change, which values impact as well as research excellence and the other will go to the department that can best demonstrate the achievement of economic and social impact from its research. A further 50,000 Pounds of prizes will be available for runners up in these two categories.