Call 2025 Pre-Announcement

Tue, 06/10/2025 - 14:00
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In September 2025, the QuantERA III Consortium will launch a Call for Transnational Research Proposals – Call 2025.

The Call 2025 will support projects in the area of:

  • Quantum Phenomena and Resources,
  • Applied Quantum Science.

Projects that will be awarded funding must address at least one of the following topics:

  • Quantum communication,
  • Quantum computing,
  • Quantum simulation,
  • Quantum sensing and metrolog,
  • General quantum science.

Proposals may be submitted by international consortia consisting of at least three partners eligible for funding from at least three countries participating in the Call. The standard consortium comprises 3 to 6 partners.

To support the creation of research consortia, applicants are encouraged to use the Partner Search Tool designed for projects seeking partners and partners seeking projects.

For more information on the call, visit the QuantERA website.

Contact: quantera@ncn.gov.pl

QuantERA is a network that brings together research funding organisations from over 30 European countries, as well as Israel, Turkey, and South Korea. Since 2016, first as QuantERA I and II, and now as QuantERA III, it has been advancing quantum technologies and driving technological innovation by funding international research projects. The network actively promotes cross-border collaboration, monitors European strategies in this field, and develops guidelines for responsible research conduct. QuantERA is coordinated by the National Science Centre (NCN) in Poland. The QuantERA Call 2025 will involve 29 countries.

Suspension of the call for proposals under IMPRESS-U

Mon, 06/09/2025 - 11:00
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The National Science Centre was notified by the US National Science Foundation (NSF) that funding to support Ukrainian research teams under IMPRESS-U was unavailable. Therefore, acting pursuant to Point 3 (4) of the NCN Council Resolution on the terms of the International Multilateral Partnerships for Resilient Education and Science System in Ukraine (IMPRESS-U) call for research projects carried out as multilateral collaboration under the IMPRESS-U programme pursuant to the Lead Agency Procedure, the NCN Director has decided to suspend the IMPRESS-U call for proposals until 30 September 2025.

If the US NSF receives funding to support Ukrainian research teams by 30 September 2025, the NCN call for proposals will be reopened. Otherwise, the IMPRESS-U call for proposals will be discontinued pursuant to Point 3 (5) of the Resolution, of which you will be notified on the NCN website.

Effective Collaboration with Decision-Makers

Thu, 06/05/2025 - 11:30
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Report on Use of Social Research in Public Administration 

The report “Understanding end-users of social research in Polish public administration” was drafted by Dr. hab. Karol Olejniczak and Dr hab. Dominika Wojtowicz, both engaged in designing effective public policy solutions on a daily basis. The report was commissioned by the National Science Centre as part of the Science and Society initiative supported by EEA and Norway Grants.

Research in the area of humanities and social sciences is particularly important against the backdrop of societal challenges, such as climate change, demographic shifts, economic inequality, and public health crisis, when hard data must be supported by insight into the attitudes, motivations, and values of various social groups offered by knowledge in humanities and social sciences. 

The report shows how researchers specialising in humanities and social sciences may effectively transform their work into practice. The key is to understand public administration, its working rhythm, decision-making processes as well as political and information challenges faced by civil servants. “We would like to help them understand decision-makers and explain why, for example, they don’t always read lengthy books or comprehensive analyses,” says Karol Olejniczak.

The report is also addressed to the National Science Centre. “Evidence-based policy-making is a challenge across Europe, which is why we need to learn how to support the use of research findings in the public policy-making and evaluation processes,” says Barbara Świątkowska from the EEA and Norway Grants Team and Social Transformations and Resilience European Partnership Team.

Dr Malwina Gębalska, STR coordinator points out that for the NCN that cooperates with researchers on a daily basis, the report is “the first step to learn the decision-makers’ perspective which can let us better design our future efforts to support collaboration between the two communities, for example in international calls.”

Surveys and Interviews 

15 representatives of public administration and 13 former prime ministers were interviewed. The team’s former research and literature review were also used. “We wanted to interview people across different levels of decision-making system, including principal investigators, high-level strategists and those bridging the gap between political priorities and public policy. We did not focus on ensuring a wide range of representatives but wanted to explore various perspectives,” says Karol Olejniczak.

Five factors determine the use of social research by public administration. “For knowledge to be useful and contribute to decision-making, one must understand the mechanisms behind it, although some things are beyond the researchers’ control. Firstly, one needs to understand the problem addressed by the public policy. Secondly, it is necessary to identify the decision-making environment and information needs of policy-makers, and thirdly, their communication preferences and ways to use knowledge,” says Karol Olejniczak. 

Problems

The problems of public administration are hardly ever clear and simple as conflicting goals need to be navigated, access to data is limited, and decisions are often taken in uncertain circumstances. These are the so-called wicked problems that are hard to define and cannot be definitively solved, but require ongoing adaptation rather than one-time solutions. Therefore, instead of offering simple answers, researchers should promote the process of learning by supporting efforts to understand the challenges of life, understand stakeholder priorities, and explore potential courses of action.

Decision-Making Process – Stages

Decision-makers need all types of knowledge, depending on the stage of decision-making process. Research findings can help them notice the problem, understand the reasons behind it, compare possible solutions or support implementation and evaluation of policies. “Sometimes, decision-makers need immediate input right away to confirm or challenge their initial assessment, and sometimes they look for technical recommendations that are ready to be put into practice,” says Karol Olejniczak.

Target Audience

Research knowledge is used by people who have different tasks, experiences and types of work, including senior politicians, policy designers and implementers with different needs and expectations as regards the form and contents of information.

Communication

Some might find short summaries, diagrams, narratives and example-based content more appealing than detailed elaborations.

Dialogue and Trust

The authors point out that successful collaboration between science and public administration depends on the quality of research as well as trust and strong working relations. Public servants more likely use the reports and analyses prepared by persons and institutions they already know and have head positive experiences with. “Effective communication starts with a dialogue. If we want research findings to truly support policy-making, we need to know more not only about the contents but also the format, timing and target, and remember that trust and relations must come first, before knowledge can be shared,” says Karol Olejniczak.

Recommendations for research-funding agencies include the development of cooperation platforms, e.g. networks addressing specific challenges combined with enhanced communication skills of researchers: training courses addressing ways of talking about research and creating brief summaries and diagrams with data addressed to specific audience.

Research on the effect of light on plants

Wed, 06/04/2025 - 12:00
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Researchers from the University in Toruń in cooperation with researchers from Austria will carry out a research project under Weave-UNISONO. They will analyse the processes triggered by the absorption of light energy by photoreceptors.

Dr hab. Krzysztof Jaworski from the Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń is the principal investigator of the project “Light signalling via cAMP/cGMP second messengers in plants” carried out in collaboration with researchers from the Institute of Science and Technology Austria headed by Prof. Jiří Friml.

The Polish and Austrian research teams will study signal transmission within the cell or between neighbouring cells that determines the survival of the plant organism.

The ability of the cell to receive signals depends on the presence of appropriate receptors that are activated in response to a stimulus. This triggers a sequence of physico-chemical reactions of transmitting information to the effector and triggering a physiological response adequate to the stimulus. This process, called signal transduction, has been relatively well studied and documented. The recent studies of the research team shows that there are elements in the structure of these proteins and in the transduction of the light signal which still need to be discovered and considered. In the project submitted to Weave-UNISONO, the researchers will focus on the characteristic sequences encoding adenylate and guanylate cyclases, i.e. enzymes responsible for the synthesis of cyclic nucleotides (cNMP), cAMP and cGMP, molecules referred to as secondary messengers.

The proposal was evaluated by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) and their outcome was approved by the National Science Centre under the Weave collaboration. The NCN will provide funding of over PLN 1 million to the Polish research team, while the Austrian team will fund by FWF.

Weave-UNISONO ranking lists

Ranking list No. 13/2024 (pdf)

Weave-UNISONO and Lead Agency Procedure

Weave-UNISONO is launched within the framework of multilateral cooperation between research funding agencies associated in Science Europe. The programme aims to simplify the submission and selection procedure of research proposals in all academic disciplines, involving researchers from two or three European countries.

The selection process relies on the Lead Agency Procedure (LAP) according to which a full merit-based evaluation is performed by one partner institution, whilst the other partners approve its results.

Under the Weave programme, partner research teams submit their funding proposals to the lead agency as well as their respective research-funding agencies. Joint proposals must include a coherent research programme and identify the added value of international cooperation.

Weave-UNISONO is carried out on an ongoing basis. Research teams intending to cooperate with partners from Austria, Czechia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Germany, Luxembourg and Belgium-Flanders are encouraged to read the cal text and submit their funding proposals.

Your Voice on the Future of Education

Tue, 06/03/2025 - 12:30
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Contribute to a new survey on the future of education and skills development in the face of green and digital transformation. The future of education is one of the impact areas of the candidate European Partnership on Social Transformations and Resilience.

As part of the initiative, a Strategic Research and Innovation Agenda (SRIA) is being developed to guide the Partnership activities as of 2026.

By completing the survey, you will help us validate key trends and assess their impact on the future of work as well as identify any missing trends or overlooked developments. Share this survey with relevant stakeholders in your country, in particular researchers, government ministries, NGOs, public institutions and think tanks.

The survey will take 5 – 20 minutes to complete, depending on how much information you choose to share. The responses are anonymous and will only be used for research purposes.

The survey is open until 16 June 2025.

Podcast No 4, 2025: Ambassadors for Science

Wed, 05/28/2025 - 15:06
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Why is seeking grant funding a smart move? What are the barriers facing Polish researchers? What steps should be taken to enhance the position of science in Europe? Prof. Justyna Olko and Prof. Michał Tomza, NCN and ERC grant recipients discuss the role of ambassadors for the ERC.

Prof. Justyna Olko, historian, sociolinguist and ethnologist, heads the Centre for Research and Practice in Culture Continuity at the Faculty of “Artes Liberales”, University of Warsaw. She is a recipient of two ERC grants. Prof. Michał Tomza specialises in the quantum description of matter at ultralow temperatures, including interactions and collisions between ultracold atoms, ions and molecules. He works at the Faculty of Physics, University of Warsaw. Prof. Tomza is a former NCN Award winner and ERC Starting Grant recipient.

Prof Olko and Prof. Tomza are among Ambassadors for the European Research Council that funds groundbreaking research projects. Apart from encouraging grant applications, 32 ambassadors from 26 countries are anticipated to foster knowledge exchange, elevate the role of science in society and support efficient research funding.

“The ambassador role is still evolving,” says Prof. Michał Tomza, adding that it is a grassroots initiative that builds on collaboration with other researchers, institutions and research community. “We want to exchange experience, encourage grant applications and highlight the vital role of independent science. GPS, Internet, electricity, much of what we use today, comes out of sheer curiosity. This is why it’s essential to build an ecosystem that enables research to flourish, even when its potential application remains uncertain,” he says.

Prof. Justyna Olko emphasises that it is the ambassadors’ obligation to promote research against the backdrop of current social, political and economic challenges. “Science does not exist in a vacuum but helps us understand social dynamics, respond to climate challenges and build resilience against disinformation. It is more than just technological innovations. Knowledge in the humanities, culture and education matters, although in a different dimension,” she says.

My guests emphasise that the strict division between basic and applied research is often misleading. “History, anthropology, cultural studies often equip us with tools to understand reality and anticipate threats. In that sense, they are just as applicable,” explains Prof. Olko.

Why are Polish researchers rarely among ERC grant recipients?

In the history of the ERC, over the past 18 years, researchers working in Poland have received less than 100 grants, which is clearly below Poland’s average scientific potential. The ambassadors point to several reasons, such as slow career progress (the system fails to encourage the development of early career researchers), insufficient institutional support, lack of trust and excessive bureaucracy. How can that be changed? “We need to support young talent that drives the system forward. The NCN has done a lot already but further encouragement is necessary,” says Prof. Olko. My guests emphasise the importance of mentoring support and advocate for participation in such programmes as ERC Mentoring Initiative or Excellence in Science Department of the Polish Academy of Sciences.

At the end of our interview, both ambassadors share some tips for future applicants. 

Interview hosted by Anna Korzekwa-Józefowicz.

The podcast is available on Spotify and Apple Podcasts, and on YouTube.

Selected quotes

Professor Justyna Olko:

“The role of [ERC ambassadors] was introduced for the first time at the initiative of the Association of ERC Grantees. We are expected to have responded to the challenge in order to promote the ERC in view of the current social, economic, political and other challenges facing the world.”

“As far as I am concerned, the division between basic and applied research is artificial. Each research project, given enough time, has the potential to influence non-academic reality.”

“The ability to apply and implement research findings must not be mistaken for commercialisation. Social, educational and cultural demands, including environmental knowledge and protection of resources, require accessible knowledge and application, not necessarily in the commercial context.”

„Structurally, for me the most important aspect [of the ERC] is the confidence it places in researchers. Trust faces strong headwinds everywhere, yet the ERC allows grants to be adjusted thoughtfully and as needed, in response to new challenges.”

“On the other hand, we must wonder how to use the knowledge, lessons learnt from projects and discoveries for reflection, to find time to disseminate the knowledge so that it makes its way into education and public awareness.”

Professor Michał Tomza:

“I hope that with the label of ambassadors, we will be able to discuss and convince Polish policy-makers about the importance of basic research funding more efficiently and perhaps even officially.”

“The first and perhaps most fundamental aspect of research is that its direction and outcomes are usually unpredictable. As a physicist, I can point to numerous examples: GPS, internet, transistors or even electricity. Most of them initially involved basic research, with no direct industrial motivation or clear application in mind at the time.”

“If we want to develop startups or other highly commercial projects knowing how to turn scientific discoveries into products, we need a pool of talent and potential that is generated at the fundamental level. Without them, competitive economy and technologically advanced applications are simply out of reach.”

“NCN grants are absolutely priceless. It is obvious that most ERC grant recipients are former NCN grant winners. As far as I am concerned, if not for many projects funded by the NCN pre-ERC, I would have stood no chance at all in ERC grant calls.”

“An ERC project must be very ambitious. What is important, it must tackle new and interesting topics that are of genuine interest to the applicant.”

"Ambassadors of the European Research Council, photo ERC"

Ambassadors of the European Research Council, photo ERC

Research and ERC evaluation process have already been addressed in our Podcast No 2/2025, when we talked to Prof. Grażyna Jurkowlaniec, art historian and Prof. Ewelina Knapska, neuroscientist, as well as in Podcast No 4/2024 in an interview with prof. Artur Obłuski, archaeologist and Prof. Piotr Sankowski, computer scientist.

A story that works

Tue, 05/27/2025 - 15:53
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“Narratives provide us with the tools so sorely lacking in traditional forms of science communication,” says Prof. Wojciech Małecki. The researcher explores how narratives – literary and media – influence our attitudes and behaviour. He talks to Anna Korzekwa-Józefowicz about how a good story can attract attention and increase engagement, but also lead to unexpected outcomes.

Wojciech Małecki, photo Alina MetelytsiaWojciech Małecki, photo Alina Metelytsia Professor Wojciech Małecki – a literary scholar from the University of Wrocław – combines a humanistic approach with the tools of experimental psychology. He is interested in how stories influence our perception of the world.

  • His first NCN-funded project explored how narratives shape people's attitudes towards animals and their welfare.
  • He is currently examining how literature affects the way we think about climate change. Around 20,000 people from three continents will participate in the research envisaged by this project.
  • He also conducts research on gender stereotypes in science – previously as head of a study involving 800 Polish high school students, and now as a member of an international team investigating these phenomena in academia.

Experiment with Matilda

Anna Korzekwa-Józefowicz: When we developed the Gender Equality Plan at NCN, I assumed that promoting women in male-dominated fields – and men in feminised fields – could help break down stereotypes and promote gender equality. In light of your research, is it an effective strategy?

Wojciech Małecki: Such activities, i.e. highlighting women's presence and achievements in science as a way of promoting equality, fall in line with well-known psychological theories, such as social learning theory or the so-called stereotype inoculation theory.

Our experiment showed that the impact of such messages can be more complex than is usually assumed. A few years ago, we conducted a survey among high school students in which we wanted to find out whether these kinds of messages really affect the attitudes of the audience.

There are many programmes in operation today aimed at breaking stereotypes and encouraging women to choose science and technology, so we were interested to see what effect they actually produce. We also wondered whether the effectiveness of such messages depends on the field – will there be different effects in feminised areas as compared to those where women are still very scarce.

As part of the experiment, we examined whether highlighting women's contributions to a given field – in our case, mathematics, psychology, philosophy and biology – could increase high school girls' motivation to pursue these areas and strengthen their interest. It turned out that messages explicitly stating that women made the described discoveries had the opposite effect than assumed – they discouraged both girls and boys from engaging in the given field. They also made the area in question seem less interesting.

How did you check the impact of such messages?

In each of the fields analysed, we created three versions of narratives about important and interesting scientific achievements: one in which they were attributed to women, one in which they were attributed to men and a third – a neutral one, without indicating the author – where only the research outcome mattered.

Unfortunately, it was the versions with female scientists as protagonists that proved least effective – they evoked less interest in the field and proved to be discouraging.

We called this result the Reverse Matilda Effect. The classic Matilda Effect refers to a situation where – if a given field is valued and prestigious – women's contributions to its development are often diminished, overlooked or entirely erased. There are many historical examples of this phenomenon, especially in the context of awarding prizes. The most famous is the story of Rosalind Franklin, whose breakthrough data, according to various experts, enabled the discovery of the structure of DNA, but it was Watson, Crick and Wilkins who received the Nobel Prize for this discovery.

In our study, we are dealing with the opposite: whenever women's contributions are explicitly highlighted, the field begins to be perceived as less important, less prestigious. That's why we called it the Reverse Matilda Effect.

This was surprising, yet on the other hand, there are data showing that as a profession feminises, wages in it unfortunately decline. In other words, when women's participation increases, the social valuation of this work often decreases.

So, does this mean that such campaigns are basically a waste of time?

On the contrary. This serves as an argument for more and more comprehensive campaigns to promote women's participation in science. We are like the crew of a ship sailing across the ocean that must be rebuilt while still at sea. We don’t abandon it but rather transform it – refining and improving what already exists.

Our research – or at least our interpretation of its results – suggests that there are still deeply rooted beliefs about who can be perceived as a “good scientist”. There is a clear discrepancy here between the stereotype of the scientist and the stereotype of the woman.

On the one hand, we have the image of the scientist as a cool, rational, analytical person – an objective mind. On the other, there is the stereotype that psychologists refer to as women are wonderful, that is, of women as empathetic, emotional, caring people. And it just doesn't add up for people.

When someone hears that it is women who are successful in a field, and this does not fit the established image of the scientist, they may start to question the significance of the field itself. They might start to see it as less serious, less scientific – reflecting existing stereotypes rather than the actual value of the discipline. This is a very troubling mechanism.

If emphasising gender can have unintended consequences, perhaps it's better to focus solely on the discoveries themselves? But then, how do we avoid women disappearing into the shadows once again?

First, it's still crucial to highlight women's contributions to science. For years, these contributions were simply erased and that's not an opinion, but a fact. Acknowledging this is the first step. Secondly, we need narratives that showcase diversity and challenge established patterns. Without this, it is easy, even in good faith, to reinforce the belief that men are the “natural” leaders in science, with women in supporting roles.

It is important that such messages reach the youngest audiences, at an early stage of education. Children should see women active in science, successful and present in the public space as experts.

It is also important to remember that high school students constitute a very specific group, so conclusions should not be drawn for the whole population. The results of this study show only a piece of reality. Similar messages may be perceived differently in other groups.

You are now involved in similar research in academia. How do the results differ from the earlier research?

Our research involved hundreds of people from different countries and continents: female students, male and female PhD students and female researchers. Only a comparison of the results from different environments will allow for a better assessment of whether we are also dealing with a similar mechanism here.

It may be assumed that reactions in academia will be different – primarily because awareness of the existence of bias against women in science is significantly greater here. Students and doctoral students know that the problem of inequality still exists, and stereotypes still influence the functioning of science; for instance, in recruitment processes or in the representation of women at conferences, especially among plenary speakers. Thus, it can be expected that messages highlighting women's contributions to a given discipline will be received differently in this environment than by high school students, who do not yet possess the knowledge or tools to recognise and counteract such mechanisms.

Are there campaigns that you, from the perspective of a researcher and a citizen would consider well designed?

I can say that I have not seen any that appear completely missed. There are many examples, particularly in the United States, where there are activities targeted at the youngest audiences. And these are truly necessary initiatives. It is also worth remembering that, in addition to campaigns, there are major scientific projects that aim to complete the history of particular disciplines – so as to restore the memory of women's contributions. These activities are equally important.

Fiction stronger than the graph?

In your first NCN project you analysed the impact of narratives on attitudes towards animals, and now on attitudes towards climate change. Can literature influence the way we think about our planet?

Communication sciences and media psychology increasingly emphasise that traditional ways of communicating scientific information, such as statistics or dry descriptions, have limited impact. That’s why there is a growing interest in more engaging forms – such as narratives: stories and literary works, but also video games, films and series. These types of messages, concerning climate change, among other things, are present in many media today and, as research shows, are really necessary.

Is a fictional story more persuasive than data, figures or a report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change?

Narratives help to deal with one of the key problems of climate communication, i.e. the lack of attention. Many people are not interested in climate change for various reasons. Some do not believe in it, and some, even if they recognise it as a real threat, do not see it as something that affects them directly. Psychologists speak here of a “limited resource of concern”: each of us has a limited amount of attention that we can devote to worrying about various things, so we tend to focus on what concerns ourselves, our environment and the immediate future. And climate change often fails to meet these criteria. That's why we're more worried about a broken phone than extinction of species.

Notably, each of us knows this mechanism from our daily experience – if we want to stop worrying about something, the most effective method is to find an even bigger worry. But seriously now, there are studies that confirm the limited pool of worry effect in the context of climate change. We see that when there is a major social problem – such as the economic crisis in 2008 or a pandemic – the level of public concern about climate change drops. Attention shifts to where a new, more absorbing threat has just emerged. There are, for example, interesting analyses that have shown how the number of mentions of climate change on Twitter decreased as the number of posts about pandemics grew.

Narratives, including fiction, but also other forms of storytelling, can help us because they have a remarkable ability: they can literally make any subject fascinating, no matter how boring or daunting it would seem in another context. If something is told in an attractive narrative form, it gains a whole new dimension.

We have plenty of examples in the literature. Proust, for example, who made the madeleine-eating scene something that has fascinated millions of readers for decades. And exactly the same can be done with topics such as climate change.

The classics of this literary trend include The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson, Flight Behaviour by Barbara Kingsolver and Water Knife by Paolo Bacigalupi. Will these books change our relationship with the planet?

The Water Knife is one of my favourite examples. It is an internationally successful, award-winning sci-fi thriller with climate change and its impact on water access in the southern United States at the centre of its plot. It is a book read by thousands, perhaps millions of people, many of whom probably had no interest in climate at all before. But thanks to this narrative form, the topic became engaging and understandable for them.

This shows that narratives can overcome the first, fundamental problem of climate communication, i.e. the lack of attention.

And is that enough?

There's also a second aspect in which narratives prove exceptionally helpful. Broadly speaking, it is a deficit of imagination. Even if we do manage to get someone interested in climate change, we still have trouble imagining it in specific, sensory terms.

Climate change is a complex process occurring simultaneously on the macro and micro scales – global temperature changes, local weather events, changes in the functioning of ecosystems or individual organisms. They are very difficult to grasp through experience. You can see this, for instance, on social media: all it takes is a winter storm in one part of the world for someone to ironically comment, "There you go, there's your global warming”.

Evolutionary psychologists point out that we are not biologically equipped to think in terms of either very large or very small scales. Our imagination works best with “medium-sized” objects: trees, chairs, people. This is why it is so difficult for us to understand astrophysics or quantum physics, for example. Colloquial language is not enough; we have to resort to the language of mathematics to convey the complexity of these phenomena.

And this is precisely where the role of narratives emerges. They can translate complex processes into concrete events and images. Narration allows you to “experience” the process in question, to empathise with the protagonist's situation, to get close to their experiences. In this way, we can indirectly experience, for example, the monstrous heatwave in India, as described, for example, in The Ministry for the Future.

This is something that conventional scientific discourse will not provide. And that's precisely why I focus on narratives – they give us tools that are so desperately missing in traditional forms of scientific communication.

Covers of selected climate change novelsCovers of selected climate change novels Which of these classics in particular allows you to “experience” climate change?

Among those I've read myself, I'd definitely emphasise The Ministry for the Future. This novel is part of the debate about which narratives are more successful: apocalyptic or utopian. Typically, catastrophic stories dominate, as it's much easier to grab an audience's attention by showcasing dramatic events, apocalypse or dystopia.

Writing convincing utopias is much more difficult because it requires presenting a whole range of concrete solutions: political, economic or technological. This can often be tedious and difficult to show in an attractive way. Kim Stanley Robinson, however, has managed this brilliantly, skilfully dosing the catastrophic and positive elements. The novel begins with a description of a monstrous heatwave in India that claims millions of victims. Critics emphasise that this chapter hits like a punch in the face – incredibly powerful, even stunning.

In the following sections, the author presents a series of global and local changes that lead to positive outcomes. Importantly, once again, this is a matter of narrative – we observe all these processes from the perspective of the people whose stories emotionally engage us. These changes are tangible, portrayed through the eyes of the characters we root for. The entire narrative takes the form of a dynamic, energetic manifesto. It makes you want to get up and do something.

And Robinson achieves all this in one book of around six hundred pages. For me, this is a model example of how to create effective narratives.

The assumption about the impact of literature has one rather fundamental limitation – the alarmingly low level of readership, at least in Poland. The National Library data shows that almost 60 per cent of us did not read a book last year.

Climate fiction is one of the hottest, nomen omen, literary trends today. Novels of this type win prestigious awards, are translated into many languages and are highlighted by literary critics, politicians and opinion leaders. One example is Richard Powers' Letters, which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize. This is a really important trend that deserves to be highlighted.

And when it comes to readership, of course, certain forms are losing popularity, but new forms are taking their place. Just look at the development of independent publishing platforms. The book market is still functioning; there are many bestselling authors. Moreover, when discussing the impact of literature, not only the number of readers matters, but also who is reading. Consumers are often people with important social roles – teachers, educators, people of culture. Even if the audience is narrow, its impact can be significant. Intuitively, although I don't have hard data to back this up, I would say that such people take this content further, reaching a wider audience. Therefore, when it comes to literature, I remain cautiously optimistic.

It must be added, however, that the mechanisms we explore in the context of literature also apply to other narrative forms. Our results can in all likelihood also be applied to other media – films, series, audiovisual narratives. And in their case, no one doubts anymore that they reach a much wider audience.

You mentioned that Kim Stanley Robinson's book is 600 pages long, Barbara Kingsolver’s Flight Behaviour is not much less. The audiobook I listened to lasted almost 17 hours. How do you find readers?

Normally, the impact of whole novels is not studied; this would prove experimentally impossible. We use extracts from novels or short stories. In doing so, we assume that the effects of reading the entire book would probably be even stronger, as longer contact with the text tends to increase the impact of the message. This method is standard.

We conduct research online, using special platforms that provide access to research panels from many countries.

We run them in Poland, the US and India. One common limitation of communication research is its focus on Western populations. We are trying to remedy this by conducting experiments with populations from the Global South, where there is still relatively little such research.

How does such an experiment work?

For example: in one part of the project, we address a question that is widely discussed in climate communication research – what kind of emotions should accompany such messages? Does a fear-based message – for example, apocalyptic visions of the future – work better, or rather a message based on hope, showing a positive goal and the way forward? There are arguments on both sides. On the one hand, it is said that fear can mobilise, but on the other, it can paralyse, exacerbate climate anxiety and deprecate mental health without leading to real changes in behaviour. On the other hand, a positive message, focused on hope, also rises concerns: it can create a sense of complacency, a mindset of "everything will be fine", so nothing actually needs to be done.

There are other methods of studying the impact of narratives – those concerning behaviour. For example, participants receive a certain pool of funds that they can distribute among various NGOs, including those working on climate protection. This makes it possible to check whether a given narrative translates into real decisions rather than just declarations.

We determine the size of the sample using statistical methods, which ensures that the survey has adequate power. This allows us to determine precisely which narrative produces a stronger impact, under what conditions and with what effect.

And how are the people selected for such a study?

Our project is based on an assumption that currently dominates climate communication, which is that there are different audience segments with different attitudes towards climate change, so messages should be tailored to the specifics of these groups. Here we use a classification developed by researchers at the Yale Climate Communication Center, known as the “Six Americas”. These researchers distinguish six types of audience: from those who are very concerned (“alarmed”) to those who reject climate change altogether.

In the experiments on utopian and catastrophic narratives, we were particularly interested in respondents from the “alarmed” and “concerned” groups, as these are the groups concerned about the climate, but their real activity in this regard is relatively low.

Is it confirmed then that an indirect message is the most effective, i.e. a combination of a narrative indicating a threat and an optimistic message?

Yes, we have confirmed a hypothesis consistent with what is described by the so-called Extended Parallel Processing Model. It points out that the best persuasive effects and the greatest motivation for action are achieved when the narrative contains both negative and positive emotions. In other words, it is more effective to integrate the element of a threat with hope than to use only a catastrophic vision or utopian “hopium”, a kind of an opium of hope.

#NCNInterview

We have recently discussed research and research career with Karolina Zielińska-Dąbkowska, architect, Krzysztof Szade, biochemist Zuzanną Świrad, geomorphologist, Anna Matysiak, demographist and economist and Różą Szwedą, polymer chemist. 

The interview was originally given in Polish and later translated into English by a third-party translator.

Results of autumn round of NCN calls

Tue, 05/27/2025 - 14:12
Kod CSS i JS

Over 708 million zlotys was awarded for basic research projects submitted to OPUS 28 and SONATA 20. Funding will go to 441 researchers.

OPUS is addressed to a wide range of researchers whose scientific achievements must include at least one research paper published or accepted for publication. Scientists are not required to have any specific academic degree or title or research experience. Proposals may cover domestic projects, projects involving foreign participation and use of international research equipment by the Polish research teams. Much like in the past, OPUS 28 is also open to funding proposals for projects involving international cooperation pursuant to the Lead Agency Procedure (LAP) under the Weave Programme, in collaboration with research teams from Austria, Czechia, Slovenia, Germany, Switzerland, Luxembourg or Belgium-Flanders that apply to their respective research funding agencies under the Weave Programme.

2,039 proposals for a total of over 3.2 billion zlotys were submitted to OPUS 28+LAP/Weave, including 1,823 domestic proposals for a total of nearly 3 billion zlotys and 216 LAP proposals for over 320 million zlotys. The success rate of domestic proposals was ca. 12.8%.

The ranking list of OPUS 28 included 234 domestic projects recommended for funding for over 448 million zlotys. NCN expert teams also evaluated LAP proposals but their evaluation results must be approved by partner institutions form countries cooperating with the NCN under the Weave Programme. The ranking lists of LAP proposals will be published in the coming months (Call Timeline).

SONATA 20, another call for proposals that has been launched, is addressed to researchers with a PhD degree conferred within 2 to 7 years before the proposal submission year who are at the onset of their career in innovative research studies. 1,179 proposals were submitted to the call, for a total of over 1.3 billion zlotys, of which 207 projects (for a total of 260 million zlotys) were recommended for funding. SONATA 20 success rate was 17.6%.

The lists of projects recommended for funding under OPUS 28 and SONATA 20 as well as abstracts for the general public, are available on the website of the call results.

Ranking lists (.pdf): OPUS 28, SONATA 20

Prof. dr hab. Agnieszki Basty-Kaim from the Maj Institute of Pharmacology of the Polish Academy of Sciences is one of the winning applicants of OPUS 28. Funding will go towards her project on a new concept of inhibiting the progression of Alzheimer's disease based on the modification of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) properties by pro-resolving compounds. She will focus her research on finding new targets for potential drugs for the treatment of neurodegenerative brain diseases. The proposed innovative and highly promising strategy has the potential to significantly slow down neurodegenerative processes. The researchers anticipate that the results of this approach will not only contribute to expanding basic knowledge about the effectiveness and mechanism of action of unique compounds on BBB properties but also open new horizons in the treatment of AD and other neurodegenerative diseases.

Dr Asha Thomas from the Wroclaw University of Science and Technology will lead a project funded under SONATA 20, concerning human-artificial intelligence interactions and redefining knowledge creation and sharing for sustainable human resource management. The project aims to understand, develop, and redefine Human Resource Management (HRM) by exploring the integration of human-AI ecosystems within knowledge-intensive organizations across India, Poland, the UK, Malaysia, and Italy for cross-country comparisons. She will study how counterproductive knowledge behaviours such as knowledge hoarding, hiding, and withholding manifest in knowledge-intensive, international organizations.

Service of decisions modified 

Decisions by the NCN Director are served on the applicants only and are not communicated to the principal investigators, if entities described in Article 27 (1)-(7) and (9) of the NCN Act, apply. If individuals apply, decisions are not communicated to the participating entity. More on service of decisions.

Ranking Lists

Ranking Lists (.pdf): OPUS 28, SONATA 20

OPUS 28 Call Text

SONATA 20 Call Text

 

First “small grants” of the year awarded

Thu, 05/22/2025 - 11:00
Kod CSS i JS

54 researchers will have their research activities funded by the NCN. The first results for proposals submitted to MINIATURA 9 in February have just been published.

MINIATURA 9 for research activities was launched in February 2025. 5,000 – 50,000 zlotys is up for grabs for research activities involving preliminary/ pilot studies, library and archive searchers or research visits performed over a period of up to 12 months. Funding will be provided for basic research activities aimed to prepare a research proposal to be submitted to NCN calls in the future. 

The call is targeted at researchers with a PhD degree awarded no earlier than 2013 who are not former NCN grantees. Applicants must demonstrate at least one paper published or one artistic achievement or achievement in research in art completed. One can be a MINIATURA grantee only once.

For the first time, NCN mentoring can be requested, involving NCN mentor’s guidance on developing future research projects. The mentoring cost must be included in a research activity budget. Mentors may include PIs of current and former projects funded under MAESTRO, OPUS, SONATA BIS, SONATA, international calls from the NCN call portfolio and calls launched by the European Research Council (ERC). Our database already includes nearly 600 offers of potential mentors from all research domains.

Public Health and Living Conditions in MINIATURA

20 research activities will be funded in Humanities, Social Sciences and Art Sciences, including preliminary / pilot studies on health emigration in rare diseases in Poland conducted by Małgorzata Skweres-Kuchta from the University of Szczecin. Funding was also awarded to Sebastian Czechowicz from the University of Lodz for his library and archive research on legal planes of public health protection and the concept of New Public Health and the doctrine of public health law.

In Life Sciences, 16 researchers received funding, including Anna Krzyżewska from the Medical University of Białystok who will study molecular trap for TGF-β1 ligand as a hope for a new therapeutic strategy – evaluation of P144 in an experimental model of pulmonary hypertension with consideration of sex differences and Monika Ołdakowska from the Medical University of Wrocław for her research on evaluation of inflammatory stage induced by hight doses of glucose and fructose in experimental cell lines and inty-inflammatory effect of the 1,2-dicinnamoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine.

Representatives of Physical Sciences and Engineering received 18 grants, including Tomasz Swebocki from the Gdańsk University of Technology for his research on thermoresponsive natural hydrogels in water/deep eutectic solvent systems as carriers for controlled-release antibiotics and Wojciech Rykała from the University of Silesia for his studies on the origin of the formation of mobile organic and inorganic pollutants from solid waste from landfills.

The ranking lists include the topics of research activities performed by the successful applicants:

MINIATURA 9 Ranking Lists

MINATURA 9 Ranking List No 1 (.pdf)

Funding Per Panel

  • Humanities, Social Sciences and Art Sciences: PLN 554,467
  • Physical Sciences and Engineering: PLN 778,366
  • Life Sciences: PLN 753,946

Total funding: PLN 2,086,779.

Evaluation of Proposals

Proposals submitted to MINIATURA are evaluated by the expert team formed by the NCN Councils. Various aspects are evaluated, including scientific achievements of researchers performing a research activity, scientific quality, feasibility, potential impact and rationale of the research activity on the development of a scientific discipline, justification of the cost vis-à-vis the subject and scope of the research activity, and development of the proposal.

The total call budget (PLN 20 million) is divided in proportion to the number of months of the call, from February to July. Proposals can be funded as long as they fit into the pool of available funds for the month. Many proposals were refused funding in the past because they were submitted in the last month of the call. Therefore, we encourage researchers to submit proposals as early as possible to make sure that sufficient funds are left.

Proposal submission date: 31 July 2025, 4 pm.

Funding Decision

In view of the recent Electronic Delivery Act of 18 November 2020 (consolidated text in Journal of Laws of 2024, item 1045) and related obligations of the National Science Centre, in conjunction with Article 147 (5) of the Act, to ensure efficient delivery and meet deadlines, the National Science Centre will no longer deliver decisions by the NCN Director pursuant to Act.

Decisions by the NCN Director will continue to be delivered as previously, in an electronic format, to the electronic address specified in the proposal. Decisions must be signed electronically, in PAdES format. Delivery of decisions depends on the applicant’s status.

Decisions by the NCN Director will be delivered to the applicants’ ESP ePUAP address. The applicants authorised as public entities will have their decisions served as an official confirmation of submission, otherwise, as an official confirmation of service.

Another Winner of Weave-UNISONO

Fri, 05/16/2025 - 10:00
Kod CSS i JS

Dr hab. Katarzyna Piwosz from the National Marine Fisheries Research Institute, together with researchers from German and Czechia, will study the aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic (AAP) bacteria community in terms of carbon cycle. She will be awarded nearly 2 million zlotys for her research.

The project “Eutrophication and AAP bacteria: changes in the contribution of AAP bacteria to microbial dynamics and carbon cycle in response to trophic status” will be conducted together with researchers from the Institute of Microbiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (Leibniz-Gemeinschaft). The study will focus on understanding how eutrophication, due to excessive enrichment caused by humans, impacts the AAP bacteria community, and, consequently, the entire carbon cycle in aquatic environments. This will allow us to understand better how to protect precious water bodies from the harmful impacts of human activity. AAP bacteria are called hybrid engines of the microbial world having the superpower to harness energy from sunlight thanks to their built-in solar panels. They play a pivotal role in the microbial loop – a crucial recycling process that ensures the flow of energy and nutrients up the food chain. Understanding how eutrophication, often spiked by agricultural runoff and pollution, impacts AAP bacteria community is very important for the health of our planet’s aquatic environments.

The proposal was evaluated by the Czech Science Foundation (GAČR) and the evaluation results were approved by the National Science Centre and German Research Foundation (DFG) under the Weave collaboration.

Weave-UNISONO and Lead Agency Procedure

Weave-UNISONO is launched within the framework of multilateral cooperation between research funding agencies associated in Science Europe. The programme aims to simplify the submission and selection procedure of research proposals in all academic disciplines, involving researchers from two or three European countries.

The selection process relies on the Lead Agency Procedure (LAP) according to which a full merit-based evaluation is performed by one partner institution, whilst the other partners approve its results.

Under the Weave programme, partner research teams submit their funding proposals to the lead agency as well as their respective research-funding agencies. Joint proposals must include a coherent research programme and identify the added value of international cooperation.

Weave-UNISONO is carried out on an ongoing basis. Research teams intending to cooperate with partners from Austria, Czechia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Germany, Luxembourg and Belgium-Flanders are encouraged to read the cal text and submit their funding proposals.