NUS Reimagine Research Initiative to seed research ideas in emerging areas

August 26, 2021
The new Reimagine Research Initiative will encourage multidisciplinary teams to address problem-driven research.
The new Reimagine Research Initiative will encourage multidisciplinary teams to address problem-driven research.

NUS has launched a new ‘Reimagine Research Initiative’ to provide seed funding for research in emerging areas, and to enable its researchers to capture opportunities in the post-COVID-19 era.

The initiative provides up to S$20 million in seed funding each year to support up to 20 interdisciplinary project ideas. These projects would require researchers to work together, and dedicate collective knowledge, expertise and research capabilities towards finding solutions to some of the most challenging questions of our time. The goal is to cultivate 100 forward-looking project teams in five years.

Interdisciplinary education at the University recently took a bold leap forward with the new NUS College of Humanities and Sciences being established last year, now, interdisciplinary research is also being championed with the new Reimagine Research Initiative that funds compelling proposals that tackle a myriad of modern challenges.

The seed funding will allow research groups to build the groundwork of their interdisciplinary projects and to yield initial results. With this strong foundation, they can go on to secure additional funding externally to bring their projects to fruition, and ultimately benefit the wider community.

“We hope to bring about a shift in mindset among our researchers. Today, most multidisciplinary research efforts involved placing disciplinary insights side by side, or with a small degree of integration, to address problems. The Reimagine Research Initiative is conceptualised to motivate our researchers to push the knowledge frontier even further by harmonising their expertise to create powerful, unconventional solutions that we cannot yet imagine,” said Professor Chen Tsuhan, NUS Deputy President (Research and Technology).

A need to reimagine research

COVID-19 has been a turning point in society. As an all-encompassing problem, it not only sent shockwaves through the fields of medicine and public health, but has had major implications in policies, human behaviour, the economy, the environment, and much more.

However, the pandemic is just one example of a modern cross-disciplinary problem. Many more complex challenges on the horizon need collaborative solutions. Tackling pressing issues like climate change, food security, and data privacy will require integrated knowledge, skills, and insights from different domains. Funding, facilitating, and finding solutions to these modern problems is the objective of the Reimagine Research Initiative.

“While the University will continue to invest in basic research, solving these multifaceted challenges for society requires a conversation among researchers of different disciplines. As a comprehensive university that offers a diverse spectrum of specialities, NUS is in the ideal position to initiate integrative approaches to address these problems more effectively, as we have a diverse talent pool to draw from,” Prof Chen added.