Brazilian Gets ‘Third-World Nobel’ for Chronic Pain Study

Brazilian pharmacology professor Sergio Henrique FerreiraScientists from Brazil and India have been awarded the first Trieste Science Prizes in recognition of their contributions to international scientific research.

The US$ 50,000 prizes were awarded by the Academy of Sciences for the Developing World (TWAS), which has described them as “Nobel Prizes for the developing world”.


Sergio Henrique Ferreira, professor of pharmacology in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of São Paulo, Brazil, won the award for biological sciences.


Tiruppattur V. Ramakrishnan, professor of physics at the Banaras Hindu University in Varanasi, India, was recognized for his achievements in physics and astronomy.


Ferreira, who studies the biological basis of chronic pain, has identified proteins that can ease high blood pressure and block pain.


Ramakrishnan contributed to a theoretical framework in which solids can be thought of as atomically ‘frozen’ versions of dense liquids.


This, says TWAS, “has had a profound impact on scientific investigations into quantum transport, nanoscopic systems, and metal-insulator transitions”.


Established earlier this year, the Trieste Science Prizes are intended to recognize achievements of developing world scientists that have been overlooked by other international awards.


Scientists who have won the Nobel Prize, or any one of three other international science prizes named in the Trieste award’s guidelines, are not eligible.


Next year’s prizes will honor a mathematician and a medical scientist.


The awards are funded by the coffee company illycaffè, which, like TWAS is based in Trieste, Italy.


This article appeared originally in Science and Development Network – www.scidev.net.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Favela Rising, the movie on Rio's shantytown

Favela Rising: a Brazilian Story of Hope Inspires the World

My close friend and co-filmmaker Matt Mochary called me on the phone from a ...

Death Squads and Impunity Still Common in Brazil

Brazil is a constitutional federal republic composed of 26 states and the Federal District. ...

100 Countries Gather in Brazil to Discuss Corruption

The combat of corruption and money laundering, and the incentive of agreements for international ...

China Gets a Long Lesson on Ethanol in Brazil

Chinese experts are in Brazil to learn about the ethanol production process, automobile industries ...

The Latina Advantage

Latina women coming to the United States from less than optimal economic backgrounds can, ...

A Chinese-Brazilian satellite, the CBERS

Brazil and LatAm Should Get Ready to Sell China Added-Value Products

The trade honeymoon between China and Latin America cannot last forever, experts warn: sooner ...

Born on the Web

In a list of 150 countries classified by the he Gini index—an indicator used ...

Brazil’s Referendum on Gun Sales May Never Happen

The publication of a Unesco study of deaths in Brazil by firearms has ratcheted ...

Can Lula End Hunger?

John FitzpatrickBy John Fitzpatrick The beaming, benevolent face of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva ...

A Glimpse of Brazil’s Filmmaker Kogut in Los Angeles

The Beyond Film program at California’s Beyond Baroque Literary Arts Center will  host celebrated ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`