A Record Ten 果冻传媒 researchers awarded Veni grants

July 17, 2025

Non-invasive monitoring of fetal brain health, using mathematics to design transport systems that serve broader society, and dynamic home energy management systems are among the projects to receive NWO funding.

A record ten early-stage 果冻传媒 researchers have been awarded a Veni grant from the Dutch Research Council (NWO). The NWO Veni grants are dedicated to researchers who have finished their PhD research in recent years. This year 鈥 Marta Gil P茅rez, Collin Drent, Alessandra Galli, Giulio D鈥橝cunto, Samantha Fairchild, Rolf van Lieshout, Alexandra Lassota, Sebastien Callens, Paula Chanfreut, and Jacob Kr眉ger each receive Veni funding worth up to 320,000 euros. This funding can be used to perform research over the next three years.

Marta Gil P茅rez: FIBRAS 鈥 Fiber-wound Bio-composites for Resourceful Architectural Structures

FIBRAS 鈥 the Veni project of Marta Gil P茅rez (Department of Built Environment) 鈥 explores the intersection of sustainable building materials and digital fabrication by developing fiber-wound bio-composites for resourceful architectural structures.

Robotic filament winding minimizes fabrication waste and optimizes fiber placement, offering an efficient and eco-friendly alternative to traditional construction. However, its implementation is challenged by variability in natural fiber properties and uncertainties in fabrication processes.

FIBRAS will employ experimental and computational methods to propose a design framework for scalable and reliable lightweight structures, such as beams or roof components, contributing to the reduction of CO鈧 emissions in construction.

鈥淢y research aims to contribute to greener construction by cutting fabrication waste and CO鈧 emissions, and by promoting renewable materials in architecture,鈥 says Gil P茅rez.

Collin Drent: Optimization Models for Affordable Precision Medicine

Precision medicine tailors treatments to patients' genetic profiles, thereby revolutionizing care and significantly improving outcomes. However, it has also driven healthcare costs to unsustainable levels, threatening equitable healthcare access.

While advancements in biotechnology and genomics paved the way for precision medicine, critical gaps due to traditional clinical decision-making and payment schemes hinder its cost-effective adoption.

The Veni project of Collin Drent (Department of Industrial Engineering and Innovation Sciences) proposes an interdisciplinary framework integrating Bayesian learning, stochastic optimization, and game theory to optimize precision medicine ecosystems from the perspectives of clinicians, industry, and policymakers. Drent鈥檚 research will develop novel optimization models for personalized clinical decision-making and novel payment schemes, ensuring affordable precision medicine.

鈥淭his is a huge opportunity to develop new scientific tools that can help to tackle one of healthcare鈥檚 biggest challenges: keeping life-saving personalized treatments affordable and accessible,鈥 says Drent.

Alessandra Galli: Non-invasive fetal brain monitoring through electrophysiological measures

For the Veni-funded project of Alessandra Galli (Department of Electrical Engineering), new methods will be developed to non-invasively monitor fetal brain health using signals acquired from the mother's abdomen. This approach is safer, more affordable, and suitable for frequent use, even in home settings.

Data from healthy and neurologically impaired fetuses will be collected to develop a model that predicts neurodevelopmental progress. Additionally, Galli鈥檚 project will propose and validate an advanced method for the first non-invasive measurement of fetal brain activity.

These outcomes will pave the way for continuous fetal brain health monitoring, facilitating early diagnosis and intervention for neurological issues, and ultimately improving pregnancy outcomes worldwide.

鈥淭his is a milestone in my scientific journey and will help me to grow as an independent researcher,鈥 says Galli. 鈥淢y research will push the boundaries of non-invasive fetal brain monitoring and help pave the way for continuous fetal brain monitoring.鈥

Giulio D鈥橝cunto: Shaping the future of electronics with light and plasma

Modern electronic devices rely on precise patterns at the nanoscale to function efficiently, which is driving the demand for smaller and more powerful components for our devices.

For his Veni project, Giulio D鈥橝cunto (Department of Applied Physics and Science 果冻传媒) will investigate how plasma and (extreme)ultraviolet treatments can modify surfaces to enable selective material deposition.

By exploring these processes at the atomic level, D鈥橝cunto鈥檚 project will develop new methods to create intricate patterns on materials such as traditional semiconductors (e.g., Si-based) and 2D transition metal dichalcogenides (2D-TMDs). These innovations will help shape the next generation of electronics while paving the way for more sustainable manufacturing processes.

鈥淕etting this Veni grant has afforded me with an incredible opportunity to advance my independent research on surfaces and nanofabrication,鈥 says D鈥橝cunto. 鈥淲ork from this project will also help to promote sustainable manufacturing by reducing material waste in chip production and contribute to faster and greener electronics.鈥

Samantha Fairchild: Crossing the transcendental divide

The heart of the Veni project of Samantha Fairchild (Department of Mathematics and Computer Science) is building a symbiotic relationship between the study of Riemann surfaces and algebraic curves, which are equivalent as mathematical objects but studied by two disparate fields of mathematics.

A major limitation to using this equivalence is the transcendental divide: explicitly moving between two representations requires transcendental functions, that is, functions which cannot be written as a polynomial.

This project proposes a novel method to cross the transcendental divide using recent advances in numerical algebraic geometry.

鈥淎s part of my work on this project, I will build research networks between two fields and connect young mathematicians with industry to address real-world challenges and improve career readiness,鈥 says Fairchild.

Rolf van Lieshout: Math for mobility 鈥 Designing public transport that serves society

Public transport operators rely on mathematical models for determining their routes, frequencies and timetables. However, existing models are largely focused on profit maximization, often overlooking the societal role of public transport鈥攑roviding access to essential services.

For his Veni project, Rolf van Lieshout (Department of Industrial Engineering and Innovation Sciences) will develop new mathematical optimization models that place this societal role at the center and explicitly maximize social welfare.

He will integrate economic theories on traveler behavior and social welfare concepts into optimization methods while also accounting for the strategic interactions between governments, transport operators, and travelers. Ultimately, this will lead to a public transport system that better serves society.

鈥淧ublic transport plays a huge role in people鈥檚 daily lives. I want to design systems that give people better access to mobility. That means rethinking how governments and transport operators plan services: not just focusing on profit or costs but looking at what鈥檚 best for society as a whole,鈥 says van Lieshout.

Alexandra Lassota: Making the hard tractable 鈥 Exploring new parameters for integer programs

The Veni project of Alexandra Lassota (Department of Mathematics and Computer Science) targets one of the most crucial challenges in theoretical computer science and optimization: developing algorithms that efficiently solve integer programs (IPs).

While IPs are fundamental for solving large-scale, complex problems across society and industry by being the state-of-the-art approaches for many problems in operations research, their computational hardness remains the central challenge.

As applications often exhibit exploitable structures, Lassota鈥檚 project pioneers in identifying new, efficiently solvable IP classes and designing algorithms to solve them. This adds to the knowledge of IPs and provides a stronger and more versatile toolkit, impacting many fields by redefining what problems are solvable.

鈥淒esigning efficient algorithms for integer programming鈥攂roadly used across various industrial and societal applications鈥攚ill help, for instance, societal decision making and optimize resource usage,鈥 says Lassota. 鈥淭he Veni grant will help me to grow as an independent researcher and to pursue bold new research ideas.鈥

Sebastien Callens: Confined cartilage 鈥 Guiding growth for better joint repair

Damage to articular cartilage affects millions yet remains notoriously difficult to repair. This is because cartilage has a unique structural organization that current treatments fail to restore.

The Veni project of Sebastien Callens (Department of Biomedical Engineering) will combine stem cells, hydrogel materials, and advanced imaging techniques to study how this structural organization develops in tiny cartilage building blocks as they are guided to grow and fuse in specific directions.

鈥淚 want to better understand how the mechanical microenvironment controls cartilage growth and structural organization, and how to harness this in regenerative strategies,鈥 says Callens. 鈥淭his funding is a major step in my academic career, and a powerful boost to continue developing my research line within orthopedic regeneration.

By better understanding and controlling this process, Callens鈥 research will contribute to improved cartilage repair strategies, ultimately offering more effective and long-lasting solutions for patients with joint injuries.

Paula Chanfreut: Dynamic home energy management 鈥 optimizing for a sustainable future

Home energy management is not just essential for saving costs, but it鈥檚 also an empowering tool to drive global sustainability through smart individual actions, such as scheduling appliance use and electric vehicle charging.

鈥淭he societal benefits of my project include environmental, economic, and grid-related dimensions through smart and collaborative energy management in homes and across neighborhoods,鈥 says Paula Chanfreut (Department of Mechanical Engineering). 鈥淚 see the funding as both an encouragement and a responsibility. With it, I have a unique opportunity to grow as a researcher while contributing to energy sustainability.鈥

For her Veni project, Chanfreut plans to leverage model predictive control (MPC) technology to dynamically optimize such actions, incorporating real-time data on energy generation, demands, prices, grid congestion, and users鈥 preferences.

She will develop new MPC paradigms with potential within individual homes and across neighborhoods, where coordination can amplify benefits.

Her project will explore groundbreaking ideas in distributed MPC, paving the way for its integration into next-generation residential energy hubs.

Jacob Kr眉ger: Conceptualizing human assumptions in software evolution (CHASE)

Software developers make assumptions to solve tasks for which they lack knowledge. Assumptions can be wrong and cause severe defects. Currently, there is no research on how developers make assumptions, how assumptions interplay with evolving software, and how to identify wrong assumptions during software evolution.

CHASE 鈥 the Veni project of Jacob Kr眉ger (Department of Mathematics and Computer Science) 鈥 will pioneer research on these phenomena by identifying assumptions from developers鈥 discussions and by conducting experiments to build the first theory on their interplay with software evolution.

The resulting theory will be a steppingstone for techniques that prevent wrong assumptions and will establish a novel research line in software engineering.

About NWO Veni grants 2024

Veni is an individual science grant, part of the NWO Talent Programme, and aimed at researchers who have recently obtained their PhDs. They will conduct research within the full breadth of science.

The 200 grants from the 2024 Veni round are divided between 66 in Science (ENW), 78 in Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH), 25 in Applied and Engineering Sciences (AES), and 31 grants at ZonMw.

The Veni grants are awarded annually by NWO. A total of 1,365 pre-proposals were submitted (667 by women, 662 by men, and 36 applicants whose gender was unknown). Of these, 469 proposals were submitted (229 by women, 236 by men, and 4 applicants whose gender was unknown).

Of the 200 grants awarded, 89 went to male candidates and 109 to female candidates, representing award percentages of 13 and 16 per cent, respectively. The gender of the researcher is unknown for two of the projects awarded.

Additional funds are available to stimulate female researchers in the domains Science, Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH), and Applied and Engineering Sciences (AES). In these domains, this has led to the award of a total of eight additional Veni grants for female researchers.

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