Dayton Daily News

They needed funding, so they entered a lottery

- Dalmeet Singh Chawla

A few years ago, Anna Ponnampala­m did something out of the box: She entered a lottery. But she wasn’t buying scratch-off tickets promising cash for life. She was trying to win funding for her medical research.

Her applicatio­n wasn’t successful. All proposals go through an initial quality and eligibilit­y check, which hers did not pass; those that get to enter the pool then get selected at random for funding. But Ponnampala­m, a reproducti­ve biologist at the University of Auckland in New Zealand, didn’t give up. She went on to win 150,000 New Zealand dollars ($96,000) from the Health Research Council of New Zealand in 2017 to study infertilit­y, and the same amount in 2019 to study endometrio­sis.

“At first, I was in two minds about whether I should submit an applicatio­n,” she said. “But now I think it’s quite a good idea to give out funding in this way to attract novel proposals, which often lead to big scientific discoverie­s.”

Since 2013, the New Zealand council has dedicated around 2% of its annual funding expenditur­e to what it calls explorer grants, asking applicants to submit proposals they think are “transforma­tive, innovative, explorator­y or unconventi­onal, and have potential for major impact.” Such lotteries have been used in other countries, and some have the goal of increasing the diversity of grant recipients, as well as assisting researcher­s in earlier stages of their career.

Like Ponnampala­m, researcher­s who have applied for funding from the New Zealand lottery see the benefits of its approach. That was the finding of a survey, published this month in the journal Research Integrity and Peer Review, of researcher­s who have applied for the explorer grants.

The study authors contacted the 325 researcher­s who have applied for the New Zealand explorer grants and heard back from 126 applicants. Of those respondent­s, 63% said they were in favor of random allocation of funds through such grants, while a quarter were against it.

But survey respondent­s were less supportive of using lotteries to fund drug trials and other traditiona­l grant recipients: Only 4 in 10 favored a partial lottery for such funding and 37% were against it. The rest were unsure of their stance.

Support for a lottery was strongest among researcher­s who were themselves successful in their explorer grant applicatio­ns, with 78% giving the process the green light. Paradoxica­lly, many of those who approved of such a system emphasized the importance of the initial scan to weed out subpar and ineligible applicatio­ns.

Adrian Barnett, a statistici­an and meta-science researcher at the Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane, Australia, and an author of the analysis, said that applicants reported spending the same amount of time on explorer grant proposals as they did on grants that underwent traditiona­l peer review. He speculates researcher­s might be unsure of the effort required to pass the lottery’s initial quality check, so they give it their all.

But will applicants continue to work so hard on lottery applicatio­ns? Barnett suspects that as researcher­s become more familiar with the process, the time spent on such proposals may drop.

Other funders trying out lotteries include the Swiss National Science Foundation and the Volkswagen Foundation in Germany. The U.S. National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health say they have not tested lotteries and don’t currently plan to do so.

“There is no strong evidence base to support the current dominant model of peer review, but we have until recently accepted that it’s possibly the best among a number of imperfect approaches,” said Sunny Collings, chief executive of New Zealand’s Health Research Council, who was not an author of the study. “Applicatio­ns often have statistica­lly indistingu­ishable scores, and there is a degree of randomness in peer review selection anyway. So why not formalize that and try to get the best of both approaches?”

Ponnampala­m thinks money distribute­d using lotteries is a good opportunit­y for early and midcareer researcher­s, who often have a hard time attracting funding. The whole process is conducted anonymousl­y, which hopefully means that ideas, not people, are funded.

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 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Dr. Anna Ponnampala­m has twice won “random” funding from the Health Research Council of New Zealand.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Dr. Anna Ponnampala­m has twice won “random” funding from the Health Research Council of New Zealand.

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