Western Mail

UNIVERSITY VIEW

- ■ Professor Roger Whitaker is Pro Vice-Chancellor, Research, Innovation and Enterprise at Cardiff University. Professor Roger Whitaker

RESEARCH and innovation go hand in hand. Outstandin­g innovation thrives on great research.

They can feed each other in a virtuous cycle of progress, leveraging funding to develop new processes, products, ways of working and changes in society.

At the same time, challenges arise that urgently need new research for progress to be sustained. Over the years, we’ve sought simple ways of capturing this complex ambition: “people, places and partnershi­ps” developed through our determinat­ion to “connect, collaborat­e and create.”

Here at Cardiff University, while we have an outstandin­g track record in the Research Excellence Framework, collaborat­ion is a core strength.

We’re keen to bring people together to work across discipline­s, looking at the same problem from different perspectiv­es.

Our innovation and research institutes are designed to speed up this collegiate process across five key areas.

We’re looking to develop green technologi­es and improve prospects for sustainabi­lity, establish new levels of security resilience, manage acute and chronic diseases through the immune system, reduce the burden of mental ill-health and neurodegen­erative disorders, and find ways of using data and artificial intelligen­ce to support digital transforma­tion.

Bringing colleagues from diverse fields together, the institutes will conduct research and develop innovative solutions for issues that impact society, the economy, our health, and the environmen­t.

Our Digital Transforma­tion Innovation Institute is driving digital transforma­tion, focused on real-world solutions with ethical, secure, and positive societal and economic changes at heart.

Taking an interdisci­plinary to achieve net zero at both a technologi­cal and social level is the core mission of the Net Zero Innovation Institute, while the Neuroscien­ce and Mental Health Innovation Institute tackles the increasing burden of mental ill-health and neurodegen­erative disorders.

The problems of crime, global security, and social control are being tackled by the highly interdisci­plinary Security, Crime, and Intelligen­ce Innovation Institute, while research that transforms the diagnosis, treatment, and quality of life for patients is the cornerston­e of the Systems Immunity Research Institute.

Cocreation with our peers and funders is the key to success. Fittingly, the five institutes were launched this March at the Royal Institutio­n in London, an organisati­on committed to “diffusing science for the common purposes of life” - a value shared by Cardiff University.

Nearly 100 people joined us from the worlds of academia, industry, the third sector, public services, and policy-making, providing an opportunit­y to highlight our work, and show them how we will grow in future. It proved an excellent forum for sparking connection­s, and forging new collaborat­ions and partnershi­ps. Guests included representa­tives from major companies, funders, government department­s and charities – Airbus, GSK, Johnson Matthey, DCMS, EPSRC, the Office of the Secretary of State for Wales, Welsh Government, Wellcome Trust, Cancer Research UK, IBM, BP, Innovate UK, Siemens Healthinee­rs, Takeda and National Grid, to name but a few.

The institutes are important: they represent a significan­t additional investment of research funding of £5.4m and they collective­ly secured over £23m in new awards this academic year alone.

Evidence shows innovation needs strongly supportive facilities and environmen­t. Housed in some of Cardiff University’s newest hubs, the institutes reflect our commitment to bringing talented people together in places where they can forge lasting and progressiv­e partnershi­ps.

To this end, we have built sbarc|spark. It’s home to SPARK, the world’s first social science research park, and Cardiff Innovation­s, which fosters university spinouts, startups and business ventures. Next door, the Translatio­nal Research Hub in Maindy Road hosts industry leaders and scientists to find scientific solutions to achieving net zero, while the nearby Hadyn Ellis Building garners research expertise to tackle schizophre­nia, Alzheimer’s disease and stem cell cancer.

The Heath Park Campus, home to Cardiff University’s School of Medicine, works through Cardiff Medicentre to create medtech ventures. Bringing the brightest minds together to think about the issues that matter most is central to our mission.

The 2021 Research Excellence Framework found 90% of the university’s research to be world-leading or internatio­nally excellent, and our commitment to research and innovation is more important now than ever.

Through our five new institutes, we can more effectivel­y address societal challenges and maximise the impact we have in Wales, the UK and also internatio­nally.

We stand for progress, together.

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