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We have established a primate research centre (The Macaque Study Centre) in a zoo environment (Marwell Zoo) for research into primate social cognition. Visitors can watch the science taking place, which 1) significantly increases their perception of the zoo as a place of learning, 2) increases their knowledge about the specific research being conducted, and 3) improves children's attitudes to science as an exciting subject. Marwell Zoo integrate the research into their educational workshops, and similar facilities are now being established in other zoos in light of the demonstrable scientific, public engagement/involvement and animal welfare benefits.
The decline of bees, hoverflies, and other pollinators has been widely described as a "pollination crisis" (e.g. Progress Report of FAO on the Implementation of the International Pollinators Initiative - September 2012) which could have profound effects on both food security, and wild plant populations and the ecosystem services they support. Research by Professor Jeff Ollerton and colleagues into the ecology and diversity of plant-pollinator interactions has: (a) provided a scientific evidence base that has influenced national and international policies relating to the conservation of pollinator populations; (b) raised national and international public awareness of the subject of pollinator conservation; and (c) led to positive changes in UK gardening practices.
Research conducted within the School of Physical Sciences (SPS) at the University of Kent has led to the development and successful commercialisation of facial identification software named EFIT-V. First sold in 2007, this software is now used by more than 70 police forces internationally and has revolutionized the way eyewitnesses and victims of crime create computerised facial likenesses of offenders. These images are circulated to police intelligence units, and the general public, leading to the identification and arrests of offenders. Police Identification rates have jumped from 5% to 55% as a result of this software. With a current annual turnover exceeding £250K, which is projected to reach £600K by 2015, Kent spinout company Visionmetric has made significant impact with EFIT-V, and achieved a position of commercial dominance in the UK, and around the world.
The Centre for Decision Research and Experimental Economics (CeDEx) at Nottingham is a world leader in the development and application of experimental and behavioural economics. CeDEx's research is increasingly influential in affecting the way in which experimental methodology is utilised by public sector agencies (e.g. Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs, DEFRA) and in fashioning the public and policy makers' understanding of how human motivations and decision processes affect individual and group behaviour and, in particular, their responses to different policy tools (e.g. incentives, regulation, information, `nudges' etc). The research of the CeDEx group has had broad and diffuse impacts on public decision-making and public debate; through public events, the provision of advice to government departments and regulators, the delivery of training workshops, commissioned research and an active strategy of engagement in public debate.
An academic from the University of Sheffield assisted the USA's Environment Protection Agency (EPA) in producing National (USA) standards, guidelines, and recommendations to drive the efficacy testing of commercial products for controlling bed-bug infestations. Sheffield was approached because of the excellence of Professor Siva-Jothy's research group in establishing key aspects of ecology and behaviour that underpin our knowledge of bed bugs, and therefore, their control. Siva-Jothy agreed to join the EPA Scientific Advisory Panel in 2012 and the regulatory document (SAP# 2012-03) that he was involved in producing is the first to regulate and provide evidence-based guidance for the bed-bug control industry, which is dealing with a population explosion because of inappropriate control practices and chemicals. Bed-bug infestation is a serious and growing health issue in many, and perhaps most, urban population centres worldwide, with litigation costs in the hospitality industry in the USA already exceeding $500M p.a. The new regulations have significant impact on health and welfare and public policy.
The main impact of this work has been to provide an evidence base to inform practice and policy in relation to nutrition and diet. Through our contribution to the international EURRECA Network of Excellence, we have developed resources accessible to international expert panels as they review micronutrient recommendations. In addition, this work has had a significant impact on the formation of two major new initiatives; BOND and Zinc-Net, both of which address global issues relating to zinc deficiency and human health. Our pioneering research activities in Pakistan are helping to transform nutrition support and quality of life in marginalised communities.
Since its formation in 2005, the Interaction Research Studio (IRS or `the Studio') has developed distinctive practice-based research into new interactional possibilities afforded by digital technologies. Over the course of eight externally-funded projects the Studio has worked on during this time, it has made methodological and conceptual contributions in the course of producing exemplary research products.
The Bumblebee Conservation Trust (BBCT), a conservation charity launched at the University of Stirling in 2006, was aimed at bridging the gap between research findings and conservation practice. BBCT now has 11 staff, offices and staff based in England, Wales and Scotland, 8,000 paying members, and has involved >12,000 people in bumblebee recording or conservation. Other impacts include awareness raising through extensive media coverage for bumblebee conservation, creation of an education pack for primary schools, joint initiatives with a nationwide Garden Centre chain (Wyevale) and a supermarket (Morrisons), helping to create >2,000 ha of flower rich habitat, involvement in a reintroduction attempt for the locally extinct short-haired bumblebee, political lobbying and influencing national and international policy.
University of Glasgow researchers have played a pivotal role in enhancing awareness and understanding of cosmology, relativity and gravitational-wave astronomy on the national and international stage.
The `rodent attentional set-shifting task' provides a novel method for assessing cognitive impairments in rodents that are directly equivalent to those seen in several psychiatric and neurological disorders. The research has had significant and broad impact on commerce, as evidenced by: i) commercial adoption of a new process across the pharmaceutical industry through use of the task in pre-clinical testing of putative therapeutic compounds and inclusion of the task in NIMH-sponsored guidelines for schizophrenia clinical trials; and ii) demonstrable collaborations with industry, including a Royal Society Industry fellowship, CASE studentships and academic research contracts.