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2026 ARDC Annual Survey is now open!

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Current Selection
Research Topic : sub-fertility
Australian State/Territory : VIC
Scheme : ARC Future Fellowships
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  • Funded Activity

    ARC Future Fellowships - Grant ID: FT0991470

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $686,400.00
    Summary
    Epidemics, mortality and longevity in Tasmania, 1838-1930. This project will investigate areas of contemporary importance that can only be explored using historic-demographic data. National benefits include (1) gaining a better understanding of how epidemics spread through families and communities, and possible mortality and case-fatality rates, to assist in preparation for future epidemics; (2) improved accuracy in projecting older-age mortality and population ageing in Australia and other coun .... Epidemics, mortality and longevity in Tasmania, 1838-1930. This project will investigate areas of contemporary importance that can only be explored using historic-demographic data. National benefits include (1) gaining a better understanding of how epidemics spread through families and communities, and possible mortality and case-fatality rates, to assist in preparation for future epidemics; (2) improved accuracy in projecting older-age mortality and population ageing in Australia and other countries; and (3) more precise estimates of women's capacity to naturally conceive and carry to term by characteristics such as her age, her partner's age, and her number of previous births. The project will also result in augmentation of a unique publicly available dataset.
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    Funded Activity

    ARC Future Fellowships - Grant ID: FT0991801

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $686,400.00
    Summary
    Compromised fertility in contemporary Indonesia. This project will benefit the community by informing service provision for infertility treatment, and by identifying the potential for prevention strategies. It will consolidate Australia's position at the forefront of research into assisted reproductive technologies, through the extension of this expertise to our near neighbours. It will contribute to the current gap in knowledge of infertility in Southeast Asia and in developing countries more b .... Compromised fertility in contemporary Indonesia. This project will benefit the community by informing service provision for infertility treatment, and by identifying the potential for prevention strategies. It will consolidate Australia's position at the forefront of research into assisted reproductive technologies, through the extension of this expertise to our near neighbours. It will contribute to the current gap in knowledge of infertility in Southeast Asia and in developing countries more broadly, and advance research on infertility conducted from human rights and anthropological perspectives. The project will reinforce the relevance of the United Nations definition of reproductive health, for all people regardless of whether they live in highly or lesser developed nations.
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    Funded Activity

    ARC Future Fellowships - Grant ID: FT160100166

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $776,000.00
    Summary
    Phase transitions in stochastic systems. This project aims to understand models of physical and biological phenomena in the presence of uncertainty/randomness. Such models often exhibit phase transitions if a variable defining the model is modified. For example, a population explosion can occur if the average number of offspring per individual is larger than one, while macroscopic defects can occur in a material if the density of microscopic defects is larger than some threshold. This research c .... Phase transitions in stochastic systems. This project aims to understand models of physical and biological phenomena in the presence of uncertainty/randomness. Such models often exhibit phase transitions if a variable defining the model is modified. For example, a population explosion can occur if the average number of offspring per individual is larger than one, while macroscopic defects can occur in a material if the density of microscopic defects is larger than some threshold. This research could lead to strategies for directing physical and biological systems towards preferred states or phases, and better prediction of adverse events such as fracturing of Antarctic sea ice.
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    Active Funded Activity

    ARC Future Fellowships - Grant ID: FT180100037

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $695,125.00
    Summary
    Spanning ten billion scales from millimetre turbulence to global circulation. This project aims to explain the role of convection in the ocean. Convection is a key climate process yet it remains one of the most poorly understood mechanisms in the ocean and is crudely represented in climate models, leading to uncertainties in predictions of heat transport, climate change, polar ice loss and sea level rise. Using a unique turbulence-resolving approach and high-performance computing, the project wi .... Spanning ten billion scales from millimetre turbulence to global circulation. This project aims to explain the role of convection in the ocean. Convection is a key climate process yet it remains one of the most poorly understood mechanisms in the ocean and is crudely represented in climate models, leading to uncertainties in predictions of heat transport, climate change, polar ice loss and sea level rise. Using a unique turbulence-resolving approach and high-performance computing, the project will determine both the global role of buoyancy-driven convection in the broad ocean circulation and the local turbulence controls on melting rates of Antarctic ice-shelves. This will contribute to the formulation of better climate models and keep Australia at the forefront of oceanography and environmental fluid dynamics.
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