Postings from the Dartmouth College Office of Sponsored Projects. Topics include new funding opportunities as well as other announcements and news items regarding sponsored projects at Dartmouth College.
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Friday, April 27, 2012
Research Grants Guggenheim Fdn
U.S.-Japan Policy
General Research Grants LL. S. B. Leakey Fdn
Edward N. and Della L. Thome Memorial Foundation, Bank of America N.A., Trustee, Awards Program in Alzheimer's Disease Drug Discovery Research
NIH Advises Early Submission to Grants.gov
This from the NIH Office of Extramural Research
The Dangers in Delay
- The application is due at 5 p.m.
- You submit at 4 p.m. on the due date.
- Processing takes an hour and 45 minutes.
- Two errors were identified.
Friday, April 20, 2012
McDonnell Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship Awards in Studying Complex Systems
Timeline of the 2012 Program:
» Applications and letters of intent accepted online beginning April 15, 2012.
» Deadline: June 15, 2012, 15:59 Central Time
» September Advisory Board Meeting Review
» October/November Email Notifications
» Letters of Intent Must Be Activated in 2013.
» Letters of intent awarded in 2012 and not activated in 2013 expire January 1, 2014.
Details of the JSMF Fellowship Program
The total amount of the JSMF Fellowship is $200,000 expended over 2 years. The amount of the award should be sufficient to support the costs of the full postdoctoral salary or stipend and fringe benefits. If the institutional postdoctoral salary scales are set such that there are funds in excess of what is needed for stipend and benefits, the excess funds can be used by the institution to support the Fellow’s research. The Postdoctoral Fellow’s stipend must be paid in full from the fellowship. Institutions cannot request that other funding sources be used to cover the Fellow’s salary or stipend; JSMF Fellowship funds are not intended to be used primarily as a source of laboratory support.
It is planned that JSMF could initially support up to 10 Fellowships, possibly more, each year.
Eligibility
- Applicants should not currently have a Ph.D. and should not receive a Ph.D. on or before June 15, 2012.
- Ph.D. student applicants should have theoretical and/or experimental training in Complex Systems Science.
- Applicants should expect to complete coursework and dissertation sometime in 2013.
- Ph.D. students that have already identified a postdoctoral position and postdoctoral research mentor should not apply. Support for such positions is readily available through traditional funding mechanisms
- JSMF Fellowships can be only be used to support postdoctoral training at a qualified institution with 501(c)(3) status or foreign equivalent that is already on file with the foundation.
Decisions and Notification
Applications are due June 15, 2012. Review by an expert advisory panel and recommendations for funding consideration should be completed by October. Final funding decisions will be announced late October or early November after the JSMF Board of Directors meets and considers the advisory board's recommendations.
Special Grant Program in the Chemical Sciences
Initial inquiry deadline: June 4, 2012
Proposal deadline: August 27, 2012
Announcement: early November 2012
The Special Grant Program in the Chemical Sciences provides funding for innovative projects in any area consistent with the Foundation's broad objective to advance the chemical sciences.
Eligibility
The Special Grant Program in the Chemical Sciences is open to institutions in the States, Districts, and Territories of the United States of America that have a focus in the chemical sciences. Institutions include schools, colleges and universities, as well as other not-for-profit organizations, such as scientific societies and science museums. Awards are not made directly to individuals, or, in general, to private foundations.
http://www.dreyfus.org/awards/special_grant_program_chemical.shtml
Bridging Cultures through Film: International Topics
Division of Public Programs, National Endowment for the Humanities
Receipt Deadline June 27, 2012 for Projects Beginning January 2013
Brief Summary
The Bridging Cultures through Film: International Topics program supports documentary films that examine international and transnational themes in the humanities. These projects are meant to spark Americans’ engagement with the broader world by exploring one or more countries and cultures outside of the United States. Proposed documentaries must be analytical and deeply grounded in humanities scholarship.
The Division of Public Programs encourages the exploration of innovative nonfiction storytelling that presents multiple points of view in creative formats. The proposed film should range in length from a standard broadcast length of thirty minutes to a feature-length documentary.
We invite a wide range of approaches to international and transnational topics and themes, such as
- an examination of a critical issue in ethics, religion, or history, viewed through an international lens;
- an exploration of a topic that transcends a single nation-state, with the topic being explored across borders; or
- an exploration of the history and culture(s) of a specific region, country, or community outside of the United States.
USAID Unsolicited Proposals Due July 1
If your institution has a good idea which is linked to an Agency sector or specific country strategy, for which there are no competitive opportunities, USAID accepts, for review, well-conceived, innovative unsolicited concept papers and proposals that advance U.S. foreign assistance objectives (as these are articulated in the Agency websites). Interested parties should explore the Agency's web page (http://www.usaid.gov) to review and determine the joint interests of your institution as these relate to USAID's strategic objectives in the sectors (for thematic programs) and countries where you wish to operate. After you have determined the programs or countries of common interest, you are encouraged to contact the appropriate USAID Regional and Central Bureau Officials listed below. These officers can guide you to items of mutual interest and identify USAID personnel in that country to contact.
USAID will not support proposals that operate only in the U.S. and will not fund infrastructure development in the U.S. Concept papers and proposals that apply the understanding of USAID development goals and objectives (specifically sector, country strategies) will be more competitive than those do not.
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Eliciting and Applying Local Research Knowledge for Peacebuilding and Statebuilding Initiative
Carnegie Corporation of New York and
the International Development Research Centre
Application Deadline May 15, 2012 Letter of Inquiry
Amount $250,000 - $350,000
Program is designed to increase the level of recognition and utilization of local peace-building and state-building expertise and capacity in post-conflict contexts where challenges are most acute, with a specific emphasis on sub-Saharan Africa.
Qualcomm Tricorder X (The X Prize)
X Prize Foundation
This is a years-long competition, with the first round of 10 teams to be picked in 2014. Since Foundation Relations first forwarded this RFP in January 2012, draft guidelines have been posted. Those will be available to read and comment on until June 30, 2012 at the second URL below. Dartmouth folks can submit their email addresses to get automatic updates on this contest as it develops. Amount $10 million Entry fees $5,000–25,000 (promised to be higher for later entries) Teams will compete to develop solutions capable of diagnosing a set of 15 conditions and capturing metrics for health. Conditions include common ailments and costly diseases, and range from strep throat to sleep apnea to colon cancer. Ultimately, this tool will measure an individual’s health state through a plethora of wireless sensors, imaging technologies, and portable, non-invasive laboratory replacements
URL http://www.qualcommtricorderxprize.org/competition-details/competition-guidelines
http://www.qualcommtricorderxprize.org/competition-details/overview
APEC SCIENCE PRIZE for INNOVATION, RESEARCH and EDUCATION (ASPIRE)
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Sign the Petition to Increase NIH funding to $33 billion
Leading American biomedical researchers and patient advocates from Johns Hopkins, the Cleveland Clinic, Penn State University, and Boise State University are raging against chronic underfunding of the National Institutes of Health. They allege that this has led to severe erosion of cutting-edge research, biotechnology industry growth, and diagnostic tests and cures for human diseases.
New Search Tool on ERA Commons to Find Other Researchers
What is the new tool Likethis?
Likethis is a new search tool to aid Principal Investigators in finding and learning about other research projects that have similar goals and objectives as their own. By entering specific scientific terms or accessing their own grant applications or grants and clicking on LikeThis, investigators will be provided a listing of similar funded projects and/or publications.What are the benefits?
LikeThis provides a powerful and integrated search tool in a user friendly interface. With the ability to find similar projects and publications, Principal Investigators can more quickly and efficiently:
- find out new ideas for research based on what NIH has awarded in the past;
- see what NIH is doing in his or her area of interest;
- use the information as a decision tool to determine if they need to come up with a fresh research idea; and
- figure out in which study section his or her application should be reviewed.
It is important to note that the searches take place in a secure environment, since the PI has to log in to eRA Commons to access LikeThis.
Who can use the LikeThis search tool?
The LikeThis tool is available to Principal Investigators registered in eRA Commons.
More information: http://era.nih.gov/services_for_applicants/like_this/likethis.cfm
Looking for a Sample Grant Application: NIAID R01 and R21
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
NSF: Campus Cyberinfrastructure - Network Infrastructure and Engineering Program (CC-NIE)
Full Proposal Deadline(s) (due by 5 p.m. proposer's local time): May 30, 2012
The "Campus Cyberinfrastructure - Network Infrastructure and Engineering (CC-NIE)" program invests in improvements and re-engineering at the campus level to leverage dynamic network services to support a range of scientific data transfers and movement. The program also supports Network Integration activities tied to achieving higher levels of performance, reliability and predictability for science applications and distributed research projects. Two types of CC-NIE awards will be made. Data Driven Networking and Infrastructure for the Campus and Researcher awards will be supported at up to $500,000 total for up to 2 years. Network Integration and Applied Innovation awards will be supported at up to $1,000,000 total for up to 2 years.
More information: http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2012/nsf12541/nsf12541.htm
MATHEMATICS TRAVEL GRANTS
Annual deadlines: February 1, May 1, and October 1
Enabling women mathematicians to attend conferences in their fields provides them a valuable opportunity to advance their research activities and their visibility in the research community. Having more women attend such meetings also increases the size of the pool from which speakers at subsequent meetings may be drawn and thus addresses the persistent problem of the absence of women speakers at some research conferences. The Mathematics Travel Grants provide full or partial support for travel and subsistence for a meeting or conference in the applicant’s field of specialization.
Selection Procedure. All awards will be determined on a competitive basis by a selection panel consisting of distinguished mathematicians appointed by the AWM. A maximum of $1500 for domestic travel and of $2000 for foreign travel will be funded. For foreign travel, US air carriers must be used (exceptions only per federal grants regulations; prior AWM approval required).
Eligibility. These travel funds are provided by the Division of Mathematical Sciences (DMS) of the National Science Foundation. The conference or the applicant’s research must be in an area supported by DMS. Applicants must be women holding a doctorate (or equivalent) and with a work address in the USA (or home address, in the case of unemployed applicants). Anyone who has been awarded an AWM-NSF travel grant in the past two years is ineligible. Anyone receiving more than $2000 yearly in external governmental funding for travel is ineligible. Partial travel support from the applicant’s institution or from a non-governmental agency does not, however, make the applicant ineligible.
Deadlines. There are three award periods per year, with applications due February 1, May 1, and October 1.
More information: https://sites.google.com/site/awmmath/programs/travel-grants/mathematics-travel-grants
NSF International Research Experiences for Students (IRES)
DARPA Robotics Challenge
NLM Administrative Supplements for Informationist Services in NIH-funded Research Projects (Admin Supp)
Application Due Date(s) | June 5, 2012, by 5:00 PM local time of applicant organization |
The National Library of Medicine, in conjunction with NIH Institutes and Centers (ICs) named above, announces an Administrative Supplement opportunity available to eligible NIH awardees with active R01 grants and, in some cases, with active P01, P30, P50 and U01 grants (see details below).
These administrative supplements provide funds to supported research and center grants in order to enhance the storage, organization, management and use of electronic research data through the involvement of informationists, also known as in-context information specialists.
The purposes of this administrative supplement program are (1) to enhance collaborative, multi-disciplinary basic and clinical research by integrating an information specialist into the research team in order to improve the capture, storage, organization, management, integration, presentation and dissemination of biomedical research data and (2) to assess and document the value and impact of the informationist’s participation.
Total direct costs requested for the supplement may not exceed $25,000 per year. The total cost requested must not exceed $50,000 over a two-year period and must reflect actual needs of the proposed project.
Thursday, April 5, 2012
AAMC Award for Distinguished Research in the Biomedical Sciences
This award was established in 1947 and recognizes outstanding clinical or laboratory research by a medical school faculty member related to health and disease that has contributed to the substance of medicine. The nomination deadline is May 4, 2012.
Request for Nominations
The Award for Distinguished Research in the Biomedical Sciences honors outstanding biomedical research related to health and disease. The research recognized should have contributed to the substance of medicine. The AAMC has awarded a prize in this arena, in partnership with various sponsors, since 1947.
Nominations may be made by anyone on the faculty or staff of a medical school or teaching hospital or by a member of an academic society. The nominee must be an individual who serves on the faculty of an AAMC member medical school or teaching hospital.
The nomination packet must consist of eight (8) collated sets to include:
- A statement of evidence in justification of the nomination
- The candidate's curriculum vitae and bibliography
- Two letters of support
- Copies of no more than five (5) key publications by the nominee
Presentation of the Award and a prize of $5,000 will be made at the AAMC annual meeting.
Send nominations to:
Office of the President
Association of American Medical Colleges
2450 N Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20037-1127
202-828-0472https://www.aamc.org/initiatives/awards/research/101678/research_award.html
Gates Foundation Grand Challenges Explorations Opportunities
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Gates Foundation Grand Challenges Explorations Round 9 Now Open
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