Veni, Vidi and Vici grants
The Dutch Research Council (NWO) yearly awards researchers with Veni, Vidi and Vici grants. These grants are awarded to talented and creative researchers to conduct research of their choice. The grants are part of the Talent Program within NWO, which aims to stimulate the development of researchers in different stages of their careers.
Veni: Veni grants allows researchers who have recently obtained their PhD to conduct independent research and develop their ideas for a period of three years.
Vidi: Vidi grants is for researchers who have carried out several years of postdoctoral research after their Phd and have demonstrated the ability to independently generate and effect innovative ideas.
Vici: Vici grants is for senior researchers who have demonstrated an ability to develop their own line of research.
The following APH researchers obtained a Veni, Vidi or Vici grant:
2022
Grant | Researcher | Project |
---|---|---|
Veni | Emma Birnie | Antibodies for prevention and treatment of melioidosis |
Veni | Laura Han | Understanding biological aging: the key towards healthier and happier lives |
Veni | Vincent van Vugt | Keep primary care sustainable with blended care: tailor-made eHealth for chronic disease |
Vidi | Eefje van Bergen | Growing up among bright books and generous genes |
Vidi | Joreintje Mackenbach | Prevention of obesity: From failure to success |
Vidi | Marij Hillen | Discussing the unknown: An interdisciplinary perspective on communicating uncertainty in healthcare |
2021
Grant | Researcher | Project |
---|---|---|
Vidi | Lotte Haverman | Mitigating health inequity by creating inclusive Patient Reported Outcome Measures |
Vidi | Janet MacNeil Vroomen | Aging in place: are the healthcare reforms working? |
Vidi | Annelou de Vries | Strengthening Transgender Care for Youth |
Vici | Meike Bartels | The power of wellbeing |
2020
Grant | Researcher | Project |
---|---|---|
Veni | Els van der Ven | Investigating the excess psychosis risk among ethnic minorities through a biopsychosocial framework |
Vici | Erik Rietveld | Change-Ability for a World in Flux: The next step for an embodied cognitive science of brain-body-environment systems |
2019
Grant | Researcher | Project |
---|---|---|
Veni | Nanon Labrie | Small children, big worries: Argumentation at the neonatal care unit |
Veni | Michel Nivard | Genomic structural equation modeling elucidates psychiatric disease etiology |
Veni | Christin Scholz | Health behavior in the context of healthy and unhealthy information |
Veni | Vanessa Harris | Better protection against rotavirus with intestinal bacteria |
Vidi | Christiaan Vinkers | Understanding the impact of childhood trauma in depression |
2018
Grant | Researcher | Project |
---|---|---|
Veni | Ellen Driessen | Depression treatment: the best match |
Veni | Wouter Peyrot | What causes depression? |
Veni | Birit Broekman | I have a dream: sex-sensitive care in sleep and depression |
Veni | Marij Hillen | Dealing with the unknown – Supporting physicians to better tolerate uncertainty in clinical practice |
Veni | Anouk Schrantee | The brain’s response to medication: zooming in with pharmacological MRI |
Veni | Janet MacNeil Vroomen | The influence of stay-at-home policies on institutionalization,costs and crises in persons with dementia |
2017
Grant | Researcher | Project |
---|---|---|
Veni | Marije Verhage | Like parent, like child? |
Veni | Emiel Hoogendijk | Frailty in older people: a modifiable condition? |
Veni | Joreintje Mackenbach | Making the health choice easier – role of the local food environment |
Vidi | Joline Beulens | Heart of stone |
Vidi | Judith Bosmans | Time to get real! Using real world data to assess cost-effectiveness |
Rubicon grants
The Dutch Research Council (NWO) yearly awards researchers with a Rubicon grant. Rubicon aims to encourage talented researchers who recently received their PhD to spend some time at top research institutes outside the Netherlands to further their scientific career.
The following APH researchers obtained a Rubicon grant:
Year | Researcher | Project |
---|---|---|
2021 | Josephine Tan | Energy-burning fat cells originating from smooth muscle cells. United States, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. |
2020 | Sanne Bruijniks | No improvement without learning: optimizing therapy skill acquisition in depression. Germany, University of Freiburg, Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy. |
2020 | Laura Han | Adolescent brain age in youth mental health. Australia, Melbourne University. |
2019 | Bart Baselmans | Which role does the cortex play in cognitive disorders in psychiatric patients? Australia, University of Queensland, Institute for Molecular Bioscience |
2018 | Janneke van 't Hooft | Improve research into premature birth. United States, Stanford University, Meta-Research Innovation Center at Stanford. |
2018 | Eirini Karyotaki | Who responds to psychotherapy and who does not? An artificial intelligence approach. United States, Harvard Medical School. |
2018 | Arend van Deutekom | A healthy pregnancy for a healthy child's heart. United Kingdom, University of Oxford, Department of Cardiovascular Clinical Research. |
Gravitation grants
Year | Researcher | Project |
---|---|---|
2018-2019 | Marije Verhage | BRAINSCAPES: A roadmap from neurogenetics to neurobiology |
2018-2019 | Joline Beulens | Exposome-NL |
2022 | Brenda Penninx, Eco de Geus | Stress-in-action: Advancing the science of stress by moving the lab to daily life |
2022 | Lucres Nauta-Jansen | GUTS: Growing up together in society |