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NUIG academics awarded Ireland's highest honour | NUIG academics awarded Ireland's highest honour |
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| Written by Staff Reporter | |
| Wednesday, 28 May 2008 | |
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Two NUI, Galway academics have received Ireland's highest academic honour. Professor Christopher Dainty and Professor William Spillane have been admitted as Members of the Royal Irish Academy. ![]() Pictured (LtoR): Professor Chris Dainty, NUI, Galway; Professor Nicholas Canny, President of the Royal Irish Academy, and Professor William Spillane, NUI, Galway. Christopher Dainty is Professor of Applied Physics. In 2007, he was awarded a Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) grant to research applied optical techniques, focused on improving diagnostic methods which would lead to early diagnosis of disease in the eye and prevention of blindness in old age. William Spillane is Professor of Chemistry. His research is focused on consumer perceptions of sweet taste in food, how this affects our sensory evaluation of taste, and how to optimise taste. Professor Nicholas Canny, President of the Royal Irish Academy, said it was a testament to Ireland's formidable position in the academic world that the Royal Irish Academy is able to honour such a variety of exceptional scholars in the Sciences and Humanities. The criterion for election to membership is a significant contribution to scholarly or scientific research as shown in the candidate's published academic work. Membership of the academy, which is by peer nomination and election, is limited to those scientists and scholars normally resident in Ireland. The Royal Irish Academy is an all-Ireland, independent, academic body that promotes study and excellence in the sciences, humanities and social sciences. It is the principal learned society in Ireland. For 223 years membership of the Royal Irish Academy has been keenly competed for, as it is the highest academic honour in Ireland and a public recognition of academic achievement. There are now 404 members of the academy, in disciplines from the sciences, humanities and social sciences. Those elected are entitled to use the designation 'MRIA' after their name. Among the membership of the academy are many of Ireland's leading scholars, the best known of whom include Professor Seamus Heaney, Nobel Laureate, Dr Garret Fitzgerald, economist and former Taoiseach, Dr Jim Browne, President of NUI, Galway and Professor William Schabas, Director of the Irish Centre for Human Rights, NUI, Galway. |
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