Published on | 10 months ago
Programmes ERCThe results of the 2024 European Research Council (ERC) Consolidator Grant call (call deadline 12 December 2023) were published. Consolidator Grants are open to researchers with 7-12 years of experience since completion of PhD (extensions are possible under certain documented circumstances), a scientific track record showing great promise and an excellent research proposal.
Proposals are evaluated in 28 evaluation panels in three research domains (Physical Sciences and Engineering, Social Sciences and Humanities and Life Sciences) composed of top scientists and scholars coming from all over the world and in addition by remote referees with necessary specialised expertise (two to five per proposal).
Of the 2313 submitted proposals 328 researchers with 43 different nationalities received an ERC Consolidator Grant: 94 In Life Sciences, 131 in Physical Sciences and Engineering and 103 in Social Sciences and Humanities. In the ERCEA news articles more background on the evaluation results, call statistics and several project examples are highlighted.
Among the 328 selected researchers are seven based at Flemish host institutions. The projects of these seven Principal Investigators (PIs) are presented in the news articles of Universiteit Gent, KU Leuven and Vrije Universiteit Brussel.
Orhan Agirdag, KU Leuven, ChatEQUITY - Educational Inequalities and Generative AI: A Focus on Language Diversity, panel Social Sciences and Humanities 3
Pierre-Thomas Brun, KU Leuven, STITCH - Studying Threads Intricately Complex Hydrodynamics, panel Physical Sciences and Engineering 8
Elisabetta Costa, Universiteit Antwerpen, ReWorkChange - Remote Work and Social Change: An Anthropological Approach, panel Social Sciences and Humanities 8
Nikos Deligiannis, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, IONIAN – Reinventing Multiterminal Coding for Intelligent Machines, panel Physical Sciences and Engineering 7
Tine Destrooper, Universiteit Gent, GROUNDOC - Innovation and documentation: Reconstructing the paradigm of transitional justice from the ground up, panel Social Sciences and Humanities 2
Liselot Hudders, Universiteit Gent, KIDFLUENCER - Towards a Kid-Centric, Dynamic and Hybrid Theory of Consumer Socialization to Understand the Dynamics and Implications of the Kidfluencer Phenomenon, panel Social Sciences and Humanities 3
Pieter-Paul Verhaeghe, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, MARIS - A Multidimensional Analysis of Racism and Social Immobility at the Societal Level, panel Social Sciences and Humanities 3
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The MareGraph project, ‘Towards an Interoperable Marine Knowledge Graph’, obtained funding under the Digital Europe topic ‘OPEN-AI – Public Sector Open Data for AI and Open Data Platform’. The project will increase the semantic, technical, and legal interoperability of three selected high-valued datasets (HVDs) all maintained by the Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ), which is one of the four partners of the project. This will allow the onboarding of essential marine datasets in the Common European Data Spaces. As such MareGraph will provide a structural component in the digital transition of the marine landscape. The numerous impacts of the project will benefit our seas globally in old and new ways to come.