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YIP
News
‘ Yip Yip’ Hooray
Prestigious awards go to six EMBO young investigators.
Heidelberg, September 22, 2004
Identifying and promoting Europe’s very best young independent
scientists is the main goal of the EMBO Young Investigator Programme.
As well as supporting successful applicants in the early stages of their
independent careers, the programme does a great deal to raise the profile
of the young researchers. Six EMBO young investigators recently stepped
further into the spotlight when they were presented with prestigious
scientific awards.
Five EMBO young investigators were among 25 brilliant young scientists
to take home the European Young Investigator Award (EURYIA) presented
at the EuroScience Open Forum
in Stockholm August '04. Reuven Agami, Oscar Marin Parra, Maria Mota,
Francesc Posas and Bas van Steensel each received awards of between
Euro 1 to 1.25 million to further their research and independent careers
in Europe.
The EURYIA scheme was developed by the European
Heads of Research Councils (EUROHORCs) together with the
European Science Foundation (ESF) to attract and retain outstanding
young international researchers from all research fields and help them
create their own research teams at European research centres. The five
EMBO young investigators represented over half of the awards going to
bioscientists.
The awards were presented by EUROHORCs president, Professor Ernst-Ludwig
Winnacker, CEO of ESF, Bertil Andersson and Nobel Laureate, Paul Crutzen.
Bertil Anderson commented, “Scientists are often in the early
stages of their career when they formulate new ideas which later lead
to paradigm shifts or a Nobel Prize. Therefore, if we want to support
creativity and progress in science we should focus on the next generation
of scientists and give them independence to pursue their own ideas.”
Another EMBO young investigator, Uri Alon from the Weizmann Institute
of Science in Israel, was recently honoured with the ISCB (International
Society for Computational Biology) 2004 Overton Prize. Chair of the
ISCB Awards Committee, Larry Hunter, said of Uri, "Uri Alon epitomizes
the spirit of the Overton Prize. Despite being in a relatively early
stage of his career, he has made significant contributions to computational
biology, particularly in the areas of network motifs and the design
principles of biological networks."
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