Conway was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society in 1947, his application citation stating that he was "Distinguished for investigations of chemical and physiochemical processes in living tissues, including a quantitative interpretation of the processes underlying potassium accumulation in isolated muscle, with applications to
resting potentials and related questions; the exact determination of blood ammonia, the ammonia increase in shed blood, and studies of the deaminase involved; general structural relations of the
mammalian kidney, and studies of diffusion rates through tissues; biochemical studies of yeast fermentation in relation to cationic exchanges and production of free
hydrochloric acid; bio-geochemical study of oceanic evolution; new methods of micro-diffusion analysis". In 1961 Conway became the first Irish scientist to become a Member of the
Pontifical Academy of Sciences, nominated by
Pope John XXIII. UCD's new Conway Institute of Biomolecular and Biomedical Research, which opened in August 2003, was named in his honour. ==References==