More funding for 'open' grant competitions needed to realize bold discoveries: U of T researcher
Further boosting grant funding of basic scientific research, as recommended by , would allow younger scientists to take bigger risks in pursuit of bolder discoveries, University of Toronto researcher Mark Lautens tells the Hill Times.
Lautens, a in U of T鈥檚 department of chemistry, told the Ottawa-based publication that 鈥渨ide open鈥 funding competitions are desirable because they allow researchers' applications to be evaluated based purely on scientific merit as opposed to government priorities.
鈥淲hen you have a wide-open competition, there鈥檚 not somebody in the background saying, 鈥榯his is what we want you to find,鈥欌 Lautens told the bi-weekly newspaper.
Lautens鈥 remarks appeared in a story in which researchers lauded the 2018 federal budget's investment in science and looked at potential next steps when it comes to fulfilling the recommendations put forward last year by the blue-ribbon panel chaired by U of T President Emeritus Dr. David Naylor.
The panel, which analyzed the way research is funded in Canada, found per capita investment in fundamental science slumped in recent decades and recommended a comprehensive blueprint for making Canada a global research powerhouse.