Hidden REF Competition 2024

The winners of the 2024 Hidden REF competition were announced at an online award ceremony on 29th November 2024. You can watch the ceremony below.

Competition entries have been published on zenodo Hidden REF Competition 2024 entries

 

Applications of research

  • Winner – Sarjhana Brindha, CAMHS Digital Lab, King’s College London, myHealthE
  • Highly commended – Claire Jones, University of Dundee, Supporting Clinical Trials through Healthcare Informatics

Communicative Outputs

  • Winner – Holly Blake, University of Nottingham, A Digital Package for Mitigating the Psychological Impact of COVID-19 on Health and Care Workers
  • Highly commended – Lynne Bianchi, SEERIH, University of Manchester, The Great Science Share for Schools (GSSfS) and;
  • Highly commended – Hannah Baumeister, Liverpool John Moores University, Forced marriage comic ‘I choose’

Contexts

  • Winner – Open Research Scotland Group
  • Highly commended – Professor Fiona Macpherson, Professor Anil Seth, Dr Reny Baykova, Dr David Schwartzman, Mr Trevor Hewitt, Dr James Alvarex, The Perception Census
  • Highly commended – Patti Biggs, Francis Crick Institute, 3Rs search strategies for PubMed
  • Highly commended – David Sims, University of Oxford, The X-NET cross-disciplinary network
  • Highly commended – The Turing Way’s Accessibility Working Group

Practices

  • Winner – Research and Development Workshops team at the University of Exeter
  • Highly commended – Katherine Deane, University of East Anglia, Catapult Cell and Gene Therapy ATMP lab
  • Highly commended – Simon Kerridge, University of Kent, Kerridge Research Consulting and Liz Allen, Cogency – Research for Impact Ltd, The Contributor Role Taxonomy (CRediT)

Hidden Role

  • Highly commended – Dr Fran Pontin, Senior Research Data Scientist for the Consumer Data Research Centre at the University of Leeds
  • Highly commended– Jenny Baker, Susanna Rose, Karen Hogg, James Fox, and Katrien van Bocxlaer – the Phlebotomy team at the University of York
  • Highly commended – Sarah Gibson, Danny Garside, Brigitta Sipocz and Jim Madge, the Open Infrastructure Working group for The Turing Way at the Alan Turing Institute