Science leads new collaborations

Collaboration project supported by £500,000 funding

A group of academics from across the University has won a grant from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) to form the Exeter Science Exchange (ESE).

In recognition that the generation and exchange of ideas are two vital components necessary for successful academic research, the award will support innovative collaboration networks.

It will also help break traditional barriers between disciplines as diverse as Physics and Business.

Supported by IBM UK Ltd and the South West Regional Development Agency, the creation of the Exeter Science Exchange (ESE), will provide a coherent and directed institutional programme of activities designed to support new and innovative research collaborations across traditional discipline boundaries. These collaborations will link the rapidly expanding research base in Engineering and Physical Sciences research (EPS) with excellent research in both Life and Environmental Sciences (LES) and the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences (HASS) at Exeter. In the same way as a stock exchange is a central, recognised and regulated venue for the trading of company stocks and shares for profit, the ESE will consist of a central, recognised and organised physical and virtual space for the 'trading of ideas' across the EPS - LES - HASS spectrum for intellectual profit and societal impact.

The Exchange will enable interdisciplinary groups to co-habit the same real space occasionally, and the same virtual space all the time allowing the creation of shared identities, bringing about a new level of understanding across discipline boundaries. It will also provide a platform for knowledge management and the sharing of best practice.

The Exchange will offer four linked strands of activity; the first three (communication, innovation and policy) are aimed at sparking interest and engagement across crucial areas, and the fourth strand (development) is aimed at providing a mechanism to develop the most promising of these ideas up to a level that they can be supported by more traditional mechanisms (grant applications, joint PhD students). It will provide a forum for ideas trading that will be available to all and has as wide a remit as possible, making connections between topics as diverse as climate modelling and materials science to maritime history and archaeology.

Professor David Butler, principal investigator explains ‘While academic management is traditionally organised on research thematic or departmental lines, and this is clearly an efficient way of ensuring effective exchange of ideas within research groups with a common agenda, it often forms a barrier to development of really novel research ideas that may come from 'left field' combinations of quite different disciplines. Even when these potentially ground-breaking complementarities are identified in different research areas, it is often hard to find the initial funding to pump-prime its development, and researchers will therefore tend to fall back to less risky, more familiar areas of research endeavour. The ESE will enable us to side step all these traditional barriers.’

The initial focus of the Exchange will be on fostering collaboration based on institutional Science Strategy topics: Climate change and sustainable futures, systems biology, extrasolar planets and functional materials, however it will actively encourage the participation of a very wide range of researchers at Exeter, and develop and widen existing multi-disciplinary research within the University as a whole.

Date: 21 May 2010