The circular, golden Nobel Prize medal, featuring a portrait of Alfred Nobel, against a black background.

Nobel Prizes

Overview

To date, 268 Nobel laureates have been supported by the public through grants from the U.S. National Science Foundation at some point in their careers — and sometimes throughout their careers. Their discoveries and breakthroughs have impacted our lives by enhancing our health, making our world safer and more secure, opening new economic opportunities, creating the industries of the future and more.

NSF was established as an independent federal agency in 1950 to promote the progress of science, largely by supporting fundamental research. Today, NSF makes more than 10,000 new research awards each year to fuel discovery at the frontiers of knowledge.

Fundamental research can lead to transformative breakthroughs like those recognized by the Nobel Prizes. The broad public impacts of NSF's mission to fuel those breakthroughs are reflected in part by the large number of Nobel laureates whose research activities have been supported by NSF.

The information presented here is based on NSF's awards database, which covers awards from the 1970s to the present, as well as on printed information that predates NSF electronic records, and on information from the Nobel Foundation (link is external) .

2024 laureates

Physiology or medicine

Victor Ambros

"For the discovery of microRNA and its role in post-transcriptional gene regulation."

Ambros and Gary Ruvkun shared the prize for their discovery of microRNAs, a fundamental component of how gene activity is regulated, which transformed our knowledge of cell development and the kinds of genetic material contained within the cells in all types of organisms. Their groundbreaking discovery has led to advances in medicine, agriculture and other fields. NSF has supported the research work of Ambros, including his early work to identify the first microRNA ever discovered, and that discovery resulted in one of the key publications cited by the Nobel Prize committee.

Physics

John J. Hopfield | Geoffrey E. Hinton

"For foundational discoveries and inventions that enable machine learning with artificial neural networks."

Hopfield and Hinton's research and innovations helped make possible "machines that learn" — artificial neural networks with the ability to store and reconstruct information and recognize complex patterns within data. NSF supported the laureates' pioneering work in the 1980s, which helped create the foundation for the AI revolution of today, including Hopfield's seminal 1982 paper "Neural networks and physical systems with emergent collective computational abilities." Hopfield and Hinton's multiple breakthroughs, achieved independently, used fundamental concepts and methods from physics to develop new computer technologies that mimic an organic brain's ability to process information through memory and learning.

Chemistry

David Baker

"For computational protein design."

Baker and his colleagues revolutionized protein design enabling the creation of protein structures never seen in nature, many of which have potential as therapeutics or treatments, new materials or in other applications. NSF has supported the Protein Data Bank (PDB), the critical repository for structure data for large biological molecules that enabled the work of all the awardees, for nearly five decades. In addition to its support of PDB, NSF has continuously supported Baker's career since his Young Investigator award in 1994.

Economics

Daron Acemoglu | Simon Johnson | James A. Robinson

"For studies of how institutions are formed and affect prosperity."

Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson's studies on how societies form political and economic institutions that affect a nation's prosperity provide insights into the global challenge of inequality and charts a path for nations striving for prosperity and democracy. The laureates' research, supported by NSF and spanning two decades, transformed the understanding of why nations differ in prosperity and how choices about governance and other factors in a nation's history — particularly following colonization — can influence those differences for centuries.

Laureates throughout history

Heart symbol with EKG line in front

Physiology or medicine

Although medical and health-related research is not explicitly part of NSF's mission, NSF's support for basic research in fields ranging from biology and chemistry to engineering and computer science has led to discoveries that later play key roles in medical and health advances. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), for example, emerged from the fundamental physics of the behavior of atoms to become a critical modern tool for medicine.

Since 1950, 49 Nobel Laureates in physiology or medicine have been supported by NSF in the course of their careers. Discoveries by NSF-supported laureates serve as a reminder of how today's basic science and engineering research and education contribute to future benefits for our health and well-being.

For more information on the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine and the laureates listed here, see the Nobel Prize website (link is external) .

An atom.

 

Physics

Physics discoveries recognized by Nobel Prizes run the gamut from research into the properties of matter at its most fundamental level to the origins of stars, galaxies and the universe. NSF supports research at both these extremes and in many other areas of physics.

The NSF physics division supports the research of more than a thousand college and university faculty, and NSF-supported physics facilities serve thousands more researchers. NSF is also the lead federal agency for the support of ground-based astronomy, and NSF's astronomical sciences division supports both individual researchers and the operations of some of the largest ground-based telescopes in the world.

Since 1950, NSF has supported 79 Nobel Laureates in physics.

An Erlenmeyer flask

Chemistry

The science of chemistry investigates the composition, structure, properties and transformations of substances and elementary forms of matter, primarily at the molecular level. Since 1950, NSF has supported 69 Nobel Laureates in chemistry.

NSF's Chemistry Division, within the directorate for Mathematics and Physical Sciences (MPS), is devoted to supporting chemistry research by the U.S. academic community, but the wide-ranging importance of chemistry doesn't stop there. Other NSF divisions in the MPS, Geosciences, Biological Sciences and Engineering directorates also fund chemistry-related activities.

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Economics

Economics research improves the understanding of the processes and institutions of the economy of the United States and of the world system of which it is a part. NSF supports research in almost every subfield of economics, including econometrics, economic history, finance, industrial organization, international economics, labor economics, public finance, macroeconomics and mathematical economics. NSF's economics program strengthens both empirical and theoretical economic analysis as well as the methods for rigorous research on economic behavior.

As the only program in the federal government with a broad mandate to strengthen basic economic science, NSF provides more than half the federal support in this area. Since the awarding of the first Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel in 1969, NSF has been proud to have funded 71 of the 96 laureates to receive the prize to date, including every prize awarded since 1997.