Scots universities claim the honours with breakthroughs like MRI and television
The world’s first full-body MRI scanner, the first degree in video gaming, and improving mental health support for rural communities have all been identified today as among the 100 most significant breakthroughs from Scotland’s universities.
The achievements are part of a list of the UK’S Best Breakthroughs List celebrating the global impact of inventions, discoveries and social initiatives from universities which have had a transformational impact on people’s everyday lives.
The inventions are part of the #Madeatuni campaign which aims to show universities do more than just teach students, that they are also using their expertise to make a vital difference in health, technology, the environment, family, community, culture and sport.
Independent research by Britain Thinks found that research is one of the key triggers to changing public opinion about universities.
The work of Helensburghborn John Logie Baird (18881946), the inventor of television, was nominated by the University of Strathclyde. Baird studied electrical engineering at the Royal Technical College in Glasgow, as the university was then known.
Thelist, compiledbyuniversities Scotland and Universities UK, the umbrella bodies for universities, also highlights less celebrated but vital breakthroughs.
From across the rest of the UK comes a speciallydesigned bra to improve the treatment of women having radiotherapy, research into the causes of gaming and mobile phone addiction and new technology that turns urine into electricity which has the potential to transform
0 From MRI scanners and gaming to John Logie Baird’s television breakthroughs, Scottish universities have been at the cutting edge
the lives of millions of people in the developing world.
Abertay University created the world’s first computer games degrees in 1997 and remains at the forefront of this rapidlygrowingsector worth more than £5 billion in the UK alone.
The university’s achievements include games simulations to assist cancer treatment, interactive training tools for police and the fire service, a virtual reality project cataloguing the memories of war veterans, and a PROF SALLY MAPSTONE St Andrews University principal
unique digital geotagging performance capturing Dundee’s links with Timex and the ZX Spectrum computer.
Professor Nigel Seaton, principal of Abertay University said: “Universities make a vital contribution to our society, culturally, socially and economically. This list highlights the full breadth of that and the transformative impact it has.”
The University of St Andrews is highlighted for the work of the Scottish Oceans Institute, which has brought together over 300 staff to promote
interdisciplinary marine research. The collaboration identified a marine invertebrate which can regenerate major body parts, which may unlock new understandings of regenerative medicine and stem cell research. They have also improved fish welfare and reduced porpoise bycatch by 90 per cent around the UK.
Professor Sally Mapstone, principal of the University of St Andrews, highlighting the achievements of her university and those of nearby Dundee and Abertay universities, said:
● Glasgow University and Glasgow School of Art: The ultrasound scan
● Strathclyde University: Invention of the television. (John Logie Baird studied there for his diploma in electrical engineering when it was the Royal Technical College in Glasgow.)
● Abertay University: First degree in video gaming
● Edinburgh University: Enabling cancer survivors to have children
● Dundee University: Flat-screen television and phone screen technology
● St Andrews University: Protecting Scotland’s oceans
● Scotland’s Rural College: Improving mental health in rural communities
● Glasgow Caledonian University: Helping pupils and parents in deprived areas “It says much for the strength of higher education in this one corner of Scotland that its three universities are recognised in this important list.
“Universities like St Andrews, Abertay and Dundee are hugely important engines of invention and drivers of social mobility, and it is not an exaggeration to say that the ideas and discoveries made here have changed and are continuing to change the lives of millions of people.”
“It is not an exaggeration to say the ideas and discoveries made here have changed and continue to change the lives of millions of people”