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Funding for Glasgow imaging centre

The University of Glasgow has received funding to create a world-leading sensor and imaging systems centre that will offer major benefits to the Scottish economy.

The Scottish Funding Council has pledged £10m over the next five years to support the Innovation Centre – Sensor and Imaging Systems (IC-SIS), which will engage in industrially collaborative projects to develop new technologies and form links with industry to bring innovative products to market. Eleven other Scottish universities and 22 industry partners are supporting IC-SIS from the outset.

The IC-SIS is one of three innovation centres officially announced by First Minister of Scotland Alex Salmond MSP at an event at the South Glasgow Hospitals Campus. The others are the University of Glasgow’s Stratified Medicine Scotland Innovation Centre and the University of Edinburgh’s Digital Health and Care Innovation Centre.

IC-SIS will deliver 150 collaborative research and development projects and bring new products to market over the course of its initial funding period. Economic projections suggest an investment of £10m from SFC will encourage industry to invest in innovation; the work of the centre could add between £374m and £596m to the Scottish economy.

IC-SIS will build on the University of Glasgow’s existing expertise in the field, and will advance the successful work of the Scottish Sensor Systems Centre (S3C), a collaborative programme funded by SFC and led by the Universities of Glasgow and Aberdeen, to support small scale collaborative projects between academia and industry in sensors and sensor systems.

Professor Steve Beaumont, vice-principal for research and enterprise at the university, said: 'Scotland has a very strong high-tech sector in areas such as aerospace, energy and biotechnology, all of which rely on advanced sensing, sensor systems and processing to develop new products and secure their economic growth.

'Over the last 15 years the complexity of sensor systems has grown, creating challenges for traditional product development models, but the potential to overcome these problems by integrating Scotland’s research base with the sensor industry is remarkably good. Our universities and research institutes have international reputations for conducting high-quality research and IC-SIS will have the scale required to deliver a wide range of research projects.'

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