WEBVTT 1 00:00:22.290 --> 00:00:24.760 Goli Yamini: Hello, everyone and welcome. 2 00:00:24.980 --> 00:00:31.489 Goli Yamini: We are going to get started here, and if a couple of minutes, as people are joining, 3 00:00:33.190 --> 00:00:40.360 Goli Yamini: so just hang on. We are going to be using the Q. And A. Feature, and we're going to get some 4 00:00:41.000 --> 00:00:44.500 Goli Yamini: message is in the text of our art in a minute 5 00:02:09.509 --> 00:02:10.630 Goli Yamini: you 6 00:02:11.060 --> 00:02:13.380 Goli Yamini: and again um! 7 00:02:13.420 --> 00:02:28.040 Goli Yamini: We see everybody still joining, so we are going to um start in a but in a couple of minutes, while um once we give everybody a chance to join the Webinar. 8 00:02:30.490 --> 00:02:46.690 Goli Yamini: We already see our first Q. And A. So good job using that feature. The Webinar will be recorded, and it's going to be posted on the program page. So we will repeat this information again throughout the Webinar. 9 00:02:47.100 --> 00:02:52.370 Goli Yamini: But yes, you'll have access to the recording of this, and also to the slides. 10 00:04:03.100 --> 00:04:05.720 Goli Yamini: Let's hold on for just one more minute. 11 00:04:06.980 --> 00:04:10.160 Goli Yamini: As people are joining the Webinar, 12 00:04:12.530 --> 00:04:15.990 Goli Yamini: we will start at three hundred and five. 13 00:05:22.200 --> 00:05:24.299 Goli Yamini: All right. Um! 14 00:05:24.560 --> 00:05:39.609 Goli Yamini: It is three or five. So if my colleagues are ready. Um! We can get started. Um, welcome, everyone. Um, We are happy to see you all here. Oh, almost seven hundred of you, 15 00:05:39.630 --> 00:05:55.419 Goli Yamini: and increasing Um! This is the smart health and biomedical research in the era of artificial intelligence, and at that state of science. Ah, solicitation, informational webinar. The solicitation number is Nsf. Twenty-three point six Point four. 16 00:05:55.430 --> 00:06:01.959 Goli Yamini: My name is Golly Yamini, and I'm here today with Tom Harrison, Tom Martin. Sorry 17 00:06:02.140 --> 00:06:11.179 Goli Yamini: from Ah, and Nsa and Dana Wolf Hughes and Yanni Wang from and Nih. Ah, would everybody like to introduce themselves? 18 00:06:13.720 --> 00:06:20.920 Tom Martin: Hello, everybody. I'm, Tom Martin, I'm. Lee Goalie, and in sites at the Nsf. In Information Intelligence Systems. 19 00:06:22.060 --> 00:06:23.150 Goli Yamini: It's 20 00:06:23.560 --> 00:06:38.850 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Hi, everybody. I'm Dana Wilkins, I'm. A program officer at the National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health. I have the pleasure of co-leading this initiative with Goalie and Tom, and formerly Wendy Nelson, for the past six or seven years now. 21 00:06:39.940 --> 00:06:41.590 Goli Yamini: Thanks, Julie. 22 00:06:41.600 --> 00:06:48.049 Yanli Wang: Yeah. My name is Jenny. I. I am a program officer at the National Library for Medicine of my age. 23 00:06:50.200 --> 00:06:58.789 Goli Yamini: Thank you. We have some of our other colleagues here with us as well from the Nsf. Group. 24 00:06:59.050 --> 00:07:07.280 Goli Yamini: I think. Um, Jim is here. If you would like to introduce yourself, and then i'll kind of go down the list of all of them. 25 00:07:08.190 --> 00:07:21.919 Jim Fowler (NSF/CCF): Sure. I'm um, Jim Fowler, I am an Ipa rotator from Mississippi State University. I'm. At the National Science Foundation in the Communications and Computer Foundations Division. 26 00:07:22.930 --> 00:07:51.499 Goli Yamini: Thank you. Um, As you can see. Um. Some of our colleagues at Nsf. Are from um, you know, within this working group are from all the uh participating directors and divisions. Uh, we have Stephen uh regular from Sd. Us for a long time. Julia Gel 27 00:07:51.510 --> 00:08:03.610 Goli Yamini: Spangler, who's been with us in, is for a while Betty Toller from Sbe and Christopher Yang, who is also from Iis i'm going to hand things off to Dana to introduce them on his books. 28 00:08:04.530 --> 00:08:22.999 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Thanks fully. So. We have quite the number of individuals from Mh. They are represented currently. We have twenty-nine Institute centers and offices, and I usually assign them to this initiative so we've covered really the gamut of interest from health conditions um 29 00:08:23.030 --> 00:08:32.580 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): different areas within the biomedical public health and behavioral sciences realm. I'm not going to name everyone on here, but 30 00:08:32.620 --> 00:08:51.980 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): just to say it. It takes a village between the Nsf. And the Nih team. We have over one hundred people. Um program Federal employees touching this initiative, so it's quite a large initiative. Hopefully um one in which you all are taking processing as applicants or reviewers. 31 00:08:54.400 --> 00:08:57.109 Goli Yamini: Thanks, Tina. Um. 32 00:08:57.180 --> 00:09:09.730 Goli Yamini: So first off, let's start with what the goals of the program are, and what essentially inspired for, and Nsf and and Nih to come together for the smartphone program. It's essentially 33 00:09:09.740 --> 00:09:22.010 Goli Yamini: that we see a lot of computing, engineering and math and social behavioral sciences, advancements that are transforming the world that are not reflected necessarily in addressing health. 34 00:09:22.020 --> 00:09:38.679 Goli Yamini: And so the goal of this initiative in part is to try and bring some of the transformative um initiatives and advancements that we've seen in other areas to health. The applications 35 00:09:40.260 --> 00:09:49.610 Goli Yamini: so well, so successful applications must uh address research gaps in uh science and engineering, and we're going to send a little bit of time about what that means 36 00:09:49.620 --> 00:10:16.800 Goli Yamini: while using uh addressing the key health environmental problem. So essentially it's used by research. Uh, the May Uh. The team must include appropriate research expertise uh, in the areas that the work are, and you know we get a question often about whether you need a clinician on the team. Um, you don't necessarily need a clinician on the team. But you definitely need the appropriate expertise. Um, in order to have a 37 00:10:16.810 --> 00:10:22.569 Goli Yamini: good enough team to be able to address the research problems that are of interest in this program. 38 00:10:23.710 --> 00:10:27.099 Goli Yamini: Um. This is a cross-cutting program 39 00:10:28.040 --> 00:10:32.609 Goli Yamini: between Nsf. And Nih. The due date is November the ninth 40 00:10:32.850 --> 00:10:36.350 Goli Yamini: in two thousand and twenty three five Pm. Your local time, you 41 00:10:36.490 --> 00:10:53.370 Goli Yamini: um. The project's not intuitive, integrative, and we will talk a little bit more about that. But the total cost of the award amounts. The total cost is one point two million, and that's for direct and indirect, which is three hundred thousand dollars a year for up to four years. 42 00:10:53.380 --> 00:11:05.259 Goli Yamini: Um! The teams have to be interdisciplinary, and the contribution to foundational science has to be in at least two Nsf. Fields. We're going to go over this a little bit more, 43 00:11:05.730 --> 00:11:13.800 Goli Yamini: as I just mentioned, Sch is a case of use-inspired basic research. I just want to ask Dana do you want to comment at all about the budget. 44 00:11:14.890 --> 00:11:22.649 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Yeah, thanks, Goalie. So I think what's important here for individuals who are typically applying to Nih for 45 00:11:22.830 --> 00:11:42.259 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): for applications is that the as Goalie mentioned, the total cost is one point two million for up to four years, and that includes both the direct and indirect cost so a little bit different than what we typically see at the Nih. And I think that's really important, not only because 46 00:11:42.410 --> 00:11:53.089 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): of the different structure, but that if you're selected for funding at a night. You're going to have to transform your budget back into the Nih form. So keep that in mind as you're putting together your applications 47 00:11:53.100 --> 00:11:54.510 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): don't you go in. 48 00:11:57.490 --> 00:12:00.930 Goli Yamini: Thank you. I'm actually going to hand things off to Tom. 49 00:12:00.940 --> 00:12:03.350 Tom Martin: Thanks, Billy. So um 50 00:12:03.480 --> 00:12:17.029 Tom Martin: like golly, said, smart health is a case of use-inspired basic research. And the slide you're seeing here is based on Donald Stokes's book pasture squadron in the Ninety S. Where he put the quest for basic understanding on one access basic research 51 00:12:17.040 --> 00:12:35.040 Tom Martin: and the considerations of use applied research on another axis. And so, while the Nsf. Supports basic research like fundamental physics, which is the meal's war pattern on here. What smart health is looking for is analogous to Louis pasture who did fundamental biology research, but it was aimed at having an impact on this community. 52 00:12:35.100 --> 00:12:53.620 Tom Martin: There's also the applied water represented here by Steve Jobs, who takes fundamental science and and creates applications out of science. And while that's important, it's not what we're looking for in smart health. What we're looking for is fundamental advances in science and engineering as though we said that address. Health and biomedical issues, 53 00:12:53.630 --> 00:12:58.269 Tom Martin: advances that are transformative, high-risk and high reward, like past year. 54 00:12:58.360 --> 00:13:10.249 Tom Martin: And so We want those advances to being computed in an information, science, engineering, math, statistics, behavioral, cognitive science, while addressing pressing questions in the biomedical and public healthcare. 55 00:13:10.390 --> 00:13:24.089 Tom Martin: And we want advances that cover a research gap not just taking existing techniques and applying them to a health issue. So you should ask yourself, what are the gaps in fundamental science and engineering that have to be addressed before you can make an advance on a key health issue. 56 00:13:24.260 --> 00:13:27.940 Tom Martin: This combination of making an advance in the fundamental science and engineering 57 00:13:28.140 --> 00:13:40.620 Tom Martin: while addressing a key health issue is going to require appropriate research, expertise covering all the major aspects of your project. So a really common question, I think. Well, I've even seen it in the chat already is whether you need to have a clinician on machine 58 00:13:40.670 --> 00:13:56.879 Tom Martin: and no, you don't have to have a clinician. Ah, but you do need the appropriate research expertise, somebody who knows the relevant research um of literature, and that could be somebody from biology or public health, for example, or for a clinical researcher next slide. No one, please. 59 00:13:59.360 --> 00:14:11.389 Tom Martin: So um, if you read the current solution solicitation there's seven themes there, and we're going to discuss those over the next few slides. These themes are detailed in the solicitation, but your proposal is not limited to just these themes. 60 00:14:11.540 --> 00:14:17.390 Tom Martin: Whether your idea fits into one of these things or not, we recommend talking with the Nsf. Program Director about it. 61 00:14:20.190 --> 00:14:22.049 Tom Martin: Next I go There you go. 62 00:14:29.030 --> 00:14:53.179 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): So these themes, as probably noted, are not mutually exclusive, and they're not fully expansive. We encourage you to come and present things and apply your perspective. So this is not all encompassing, but one of the themes are a fairness and trustworthiness. And really the focus here is real world considerations beyond conventional analytical approaches. 63 00:14:53.370 --> 00:15:06.640 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): And we're really focusing here on new directions for computational science that are fair and trustworthy for clinicians, for patients or participants. 64 00:15:06.650 --> 00:15:36.630 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): And what underpinning that includes things like algorithmic bias, data, fairness, new models for causality that can be developed, and new methods that can help address disparities, improve equity as well, including integration and linkages to social and economic data. Um. The ability to use and create novel methods that account for broad range of certainties in the data and the potential to a new insight into 65 00:15:36.640 --> 00:15:41.269 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): and Ai systems for a clinical decision support. Next slide 66 00:15:43.380 --> 00:15:55.350 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): another one of our themes is transformative analytics, and this includes different bucket areas such as fusion and analysis of multi-level and multi-scale data, 67 00:15:55.380 --> 00:16:11.059 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): especially in scenarios where there are either limited data, noisy data or missing this new tools and techniques for visualization and modeling of the data and behavioral contextual and multimodal data 68 00:16:11.200 --> 00:16:12.720 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): that's like. 69 00:16:15.740 --> 00:16:33.870 Tom Martin: So another theme is multimodal and reconfigurable sensors. And what we mean by that is, we're not looking for sensors that are just a single type, but integrated systems, that sense different types of signals, not just electrochemical, but, for instance, biochemical, magnetic, acoustic, and so on. 70 00:16:33.880 --> 00:16:37.379 Tom Martin: And again in an integrated system. Next slide, please. 71 00:16:39.580 --> 00:16:49.169 Tom Martin: We're also interested in cyber fiscal systems aimed at biomedical areas. So these are closed loop or human in the loop systems that combine computation, communicate 72 00:16:49.770 --> 00:17:09.279 Tom Martin: and control cyber fiscal research systems. Research can cover a wide variety of fundamental topics, such as dependability, trustworthiness, high insurance, formal verification and even unconventional substrates. For example, integrate electronic and biological substrates. Next slide goalie, please. 73 00:17:10.210 --> 00:17:26.150 Tom Martin: Um. Robotics is another theme, and robotics covers intelligence that's embodied in such a way that it processes information, senses, plans, and either moves or substantially alters. It moves within or substantially alters in space working environment. 74 00:17:26.160 --> 00:17:45.149 Tom Martin: So we're looking for novel robotics, novel robotics that address a key health issue, such as enhancing health, improving social connection, reducing disability, you know, and not just limited to things that are common right now, like um Surgical robotics, um research issues in human robot interaction are also 75 00:17:46.010 --> 00:17:47.620 Tom Martin: next I going 76 00:17:50.400 --> 00:18:14.889 Goli Yamini: um. The other thing we're looking at is biomedical imaging interpretation. Um, we want to look at um image presentation, basically how human pattern recognition, visual searches, perceptual learning, attentional bias and et cetera can really affect how observers are understanding images. 77 00:18:14.900 --> 00:18:28.640 Goli Yamini: Um, we really want to understand context and environment. So when you're analyzing images, when you're looking at an image, What kind of things 78 00:18:28.920 --> 00:18:47.400 Goli Yamini: effective both in context and environment are we? Ah, seeing um including human environments? Um! But we also want to you to exploit these understandings um like. Can we do a better job at providing images in a way that they help um 79 00:18:47.410 --> 00:18:53.240 Goli Yamini: perceptual decision making. And could this be? And you know this could be in both threed and forty. 80 00:18:53.860 --> 00:19:05.320 Goli Yamini: The last thing that we're talking about, which is definitely not mutually exclusive from any of the other themes that we discussed is unpacking health disparities and health equity. 81 00:19:05.330 --> 00:19:23.290 Goli Yamini: Um, for this thing we really are trying. We really are focusing on reduction, assessment and medication. Um, where you live determines your life. Expectancy as relates to social determinants of health, for example, this in that uh, not a math, and that 82 00:19:23.300 --> 00:19:39.830 Goli Yamini: a map of New Orleans. Ah! With ah life expectancy noted Ah! In different geographical areas, for example, in this area, where it's an affluent ah suburb of New Orleans at life expectancy is higher in some of the lower income areas. 83 00:19:39.840 --> 00:20:06.460 Goli Yamini: And um, you know this, the reduction assessment and mitigation can be done with either ah data-driven Ai models, or developing new strategies or understandings of um. How discrimination or bias affect social determinants of health and or develop ah novel methods of distinguishing basically complex pathways between 84 00:20:06.470 --> 00:20:10.420 Goli Yamini: levels of influence and domain. Um, in this area. 85 00:20:11.370 --> 00:20:12.640 Goli Yamini: Ooh! 86 00:20:12.750 --> 00:20:15.919 Goli Yamini: We are not going to talk about the review process. 87 00:20:16.870 --> 00:20:29.359 Goli Yamini: This is an Nsf. And nih joint program, and our review process is also a joint review process, and i'm going to get help from my colleagues, Tom and Dana, in kind of walking us through this pathway. 88 00:20:29.790 --> 00:20:32.520 What I want to start with saying is that 89 00:20:32.590 --> 00:20:52.899 Goli Yamini: the proposals coming to and Nsf. Ah, which is why we're going to emphasize later again that please make sure they're written in the Nsf. Format they're going to come into, and Nsf. Get paneled here um, and get reviewed jointly by and Nsf. Pds and Um and Nih Science review officers. 90 00:20:52.910 --> 00:21:15.340 Goli Yamini: So within the review process, once the panel and the reviewers go over the proposal, the Nsfpds are going to ask them to wrap the proposal, and then the and Nihs are going to add, Ask for the scoring, and I want to have this to Dana to kind of explain that a little bit more um, and then to Tom to kind of 91 00:21:15.350 --> 00:21:17.269 Goli Yamini: follow through with this part. 92 00:21:18.310 --> 00:21:25.080 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Thanks, Goalie. So, as Goalie said, These applications are submitted directly to Nsf. 93 00:21:25.300 --> 00:21:39.330 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): For this round. It'll be November ninth, Five Pm. Local. You'll submit them to Nsf. In the Nsf form Nih and is up work together to put together these joint review panels, 94 00:21:39.580 --> 00:21:46.520 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): which there's going to be an Msf. Pv. In the panel, and an Nih scientific review officer, 95 00:21:46.530 --> 00:22:02.560 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): and we'll get both scores. And then, once the scores for the Nih side uh occur. After these panels are done, we have these applications not only scored in the Nih form. They also are percentiled, and 96 00:22:02.880 --> 00:22:15.319 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): the reviews that occur during this time are written in the Nsf. Format. So everything up until this point is still Nsf. Except the Nih scores and percentiles. 97 00:22:15.330 --> 00:22:29.300 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): It's at that time that the Nih staff meet to discuss which applications are of interest to the institutes and centers for selection to come over to Nih if that were to occur. 98 00:22:29.470 --> 00:22:47.020 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): What will happen is that you will receive an email from myself. Golly, Tom and others notifying you of this, and providing you instructions of how to move forward with resubmitting your application to Nih, 99 00:22:47.030 --> 00:22:54.859 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): you'll go through that process, submitting it. It does not get re-reviewed at that point. It just goes through the system 100 00:22:55.020 --> 00:22:57.890 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): and through what we call a dummy. Panel. 101 00:22:57.910 --> 00:23:12.940 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Those scores that occur during the initial joint review process are released, and then everything that you would do normally from there for funding, going to council and whatnot stays the same. So 102 00:23:12.950 --> 00:23:25.979 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): it's a little bit of a different process. But just know that I think really important to this is that your application will only be reviewed once, but it will receive an nsf and an nih score. 103 00:23:27.750 --> 00:23:46.400 Tom Martin: Dana, you and Golie have done such a good job of that. I don't think I have anything to add to it. So I would just reiterate everyone. You will submit an Nsf proposal. It will go through a normal Ah, nsf ah review panel with an nih sro um present, and it will get us, for in addition to the normal Nsf. 104 00:23:46.410 --> 00:23:49.189 Tom Martin: Uh review and and reading. So 105 00:23:49.200 --> 00:23:50.790 Tom Martin: next slide, please. Um, 106 00:23:50.800 --> 00:24:10.270 Goli Yamini: I just wanted to. Um say one more thing because of this joint review process and sort of the the timelines that Nih and Sf meet. Sometimes this part our funding timeline gets extended, and there is a difference between when Nsex considers a startup project, and when Nih consider, start a project. So 107 00:24:10.280 --> 00:24:18.889 Goli Yamini: you know, if you want to elaborate on that, but the nih for them. When you apply here the starting would be the fall, so that's sort of when to expect 108 00:24:18.900 --> 00:24:20.910 Goli Yamini: news and funding 109 00:24:21.080 --> 00:24:25.300 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Yeah, or a little bit later depending So um 110 00:24:25.330 --> 00:24:37.269 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): well, we'll go through this round, for example. You all will submit in November. Reviews will occur sometime in the winter, and you'll have a score. 111 00:24:37.330 --> 00:24:51.189 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Then we go through the process of selection and early spray, and you're if you're selected for funding at, for example, you'll go to Summer Council like June, 112 00:24:51.200 --> 00:24:59.540 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): July, maybe even August or May May through August you'll go through Council depending on the Institutor center in which you're going to be funded, 113 00:25:00.430 --> 00:25:12.860 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): depending on where you you're selected for funding at Nih you could either receive funds by the end of the fiscal year of fy twenty-four. Or, for example, if you were going to be funded by Nci, for example, 114 00:25:12.900 --> 00:25:25.580 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): we would not make the Award until December, so it is not uncommon to have a delay. It does not mean that you're not going to be funded when you are selected to move forward at Nih. 115 00:25:25.590 --> 00:25:38.010 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): It is not an official notice of a war or selection of funding, but it is um fairly likely that the that will be made. But we just want to note for you all that there is that delay that can't occur. 116 00:25:38.020 --> 00:25:46.270 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): And just to be in constant contact with your program officer at the Institute or center that's going to be making that award for updates. 117 00:25:49.250 --> 00:25:50.500 Goli Yamini: Thank you. 118 00:25:52.090 --> 00:26:09.360 Tom Martin: So um the Standard Nsf Review criteria of both intellectual merit and broader impact supply. And this page lists the elements that will be considered for both criteria, and you should consider them in the top down in order. As we've said before, smart health proposals 119 00:26:09.370 --> 00:26:28.680 Tom Martin: have to make fundamental contributions in science and engineering, so that advancing knowledge and understanding within his own field or across different fields to the intellectual American, very, very important, and I can't emphasize that enough. You can't take just an existing technique and apply it to a health problem. You have to make fundamental contributions to science and engineering. 120 00:26:28.690 --> 00:26:31.660 Tom Martin: Um, next slide, please totally 121 00:26:32.740 --> 00:26:46.759 Tom Martin: um. The other thing is the the broader impacts the the benefits of society and advancing desired societal outcomes this isn't an exhaustive list, but it's important to keep in mind the the red bullet at the bottom. 122 00:26:46.770 --> 00:26:54.469 Tom Martin: The broader impact can't just be the biomedical or health impact. It's got to be more than that. So next slide, please go. 123 00:26:56.700 --> 00:27:10.519 Tom Martin: So what are the advances in in terms of the scientific environment? What are the advances in the foundational science and engineering. How novel and transformative are they? Is there a good plan for making these advances? Does the improve? 124 00:27:10.730 --> 00:27:21.359 Tom Martin: Does the proposal include the right team. So look into collaboration management plan. Do they have good institutional support, and we'll talk about each of these three things in the next few slides 125 00:27:23.100 --> 00:27:24.749 Tom Martin: next slide people. 126 00:27:27.420 --> 00:27:29.630 Goli Yamini: So 127 00:27:29.930 --> 00:27:32.199 Goli Yamini: we are going to discuss 128 00:27:32.290 --> 00:28:00.379 Goli Yamini: advancements in two fundamental science and engineering areas. We refer to this a few times before that the proposals have to include at least two areas. Now, the areas that we're looking at in computer information sciences or artificial intelligence machine learning your formality, some of your pictures, and so forth. And engineering is more to moral sensors. And all the way to dynamic systems and materials uh for math and statistics. It's 129 00:28:00.390 --> 00:28:17.719 Goli Yamini: like stochastic modeling uh analysis, interpretation and characterizing uncertainty. And in areas of social behavior and cognitive sciences. We're looking at perception, perception, social social psychology, cognition, emotion, economics, ethics, and linguistics. 130 00:28:17.730 --> 00:28:36.150 Goli Yamini: But what I wanted to highlight here is that when we talk about two areas we don't necessarily mean that you have to have computer science and engineering for computer science and social materials, sciences or engineering and math, or any of these two. It could also be two areas within the same distance. 131 00:28:36.160 --> 00:28:58.460 Goli Yamini: So it can be two different areas of computer science, like artificial intelligence and natural language technology. Or it can be something like sensors and Ai or um social psychology, and like sensing or ah, mathematical, stochastic modeling, or something like that, so it can be um either 132 00:28:58.470 --> 00:29:16.640 Goli Yamini: different areas of science and engineering. And as of science and engineering. Again, when we're talking about science, we mean Nsf: science. So these disciplines are within the same discipline that two areas of focus. Those could be the two that apply. And we want to 133 00:29:16.650 --> 00:29:29.019 Goli Yamini: kind of hammer this in today. This is probably one of the most important. Take home messages for us that the primary advancement has to be in these areas of science like Um Health for us is a 134 00:29:29.150 --> 00:29:37.560 Goli Yamini: the century area of impact. It's a use case. It's a use case. It's not necessarily the area of advancement that we are looking at, 135 00:29:38.560 --> 00:29:41.720 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): and I can't jump in. There. Goal is. Yes, 136 00:29:42.320 --> 00:29:52.099 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): when you are putting together your teams, you, as the applicant, need to be able to articulate 137 00:29:52.510 --> 00:30:21.000 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): how you're advancing the two fundamental areas. If on the team you're putting together mirrors on that. And Goalie has mentioned before you get a lot of questions of Do I need to have a clinician on this that is up to you. It needs to make sense, and you need to be able to articulate that in your application, throwing a clinician on your application, because you think that you need to, because Nih is involved. It's not going to do you well in review. 138 00:30:21.010 --> 00:30:28.489 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): It's actually most likely going to hurt you because it doesn't make sense to the review team. Looking at your application 139 00:30:28.500 --> 00:30:49.189 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): also, as Goalie said, you need to be focused on fundamental science and engineering and the transformations and advances that are going to occur here. These are not nih applications. Health is the use case. It comes secondary to the two fundamental science and engineering approaches. We're not applying 140 00:30:49.200 --> 00:31:02.319 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): technology that already exists that typically we see in. You know, some of our Nih applications. It's one of the new data linkages and methods to make that occur. What are the new advancements 141 00:31:02.380 --> 00:31:13.780 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): in computer science? We're engineering, they're occurring. And then, lastly, I just want to mention to these are demonstration projects in scale. 142 00:31:13.790 --> 00:31:36.539 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): And so, as you're thinking about these areas and your question, it's also going to be important that you think about the scale for this program. We're not looking at randomized control trials, big sort of intervention in cohort studies. These are really demonstration projects that are advancing these two areas of science. 143 00:31:40.210 --> 00:32:09.870 Goli Yamini: Thank you so much, Dana, for that clarification. Um, we're gonna come. Actually, we're gonna keep repeating this simple T uh, but one of the requirements that you guys have are collaboration plans. All proposals must include collaboration and management part, and it cannot be more than uh two pages. Um. The plan was. Describe description of the team and their roles. Here is where you talk about your clinician like Dana was saying. You're not just going to slap the person on, and you know 144 00:32:09.880 --> 00:32:13.829 Goli Yamini: the roles really will have to be defined here. What everybody 145 00:32:13.840 --> 00:32:43.450 Goli Yamini: is bringing to the table has to be laid out. This gets scrutinized and reviewed in panel. Uh it, it must include a plan for integration and ways to support the interdisciplinary collaboration. This is an interdisciplinary program this will be introduced in the proposals. We want to see how each aspect of the project is being incorporated into the bigger picture. And um! How that team science is happening, how that 146 00:32:43.460 --> 00:33:03.270 Goli Yamini: collaboration is happening. Um! And you need to have a team member's expertise for the projects. So um as they now refer to. Uh the clinical aspects, the technical aspects you need to really balance the team. Um, and design your team based on essentially the needs of the proposed work. 147 00:33:06.450 --> 00:33:08.200 Goli Yamini: Tom, Would you like to? 148 00:33:08.210 --> 00:33:17.480 Tom Martin: Yeah. So um, thanks, Goalie. So all the proposals have to include a data management plan. The data management plan is up to two pages, 149 00:33:17.490 --> 00:33:30.650 Tom Martin: and the data management plan has to describe how the proposal is going to conform to the Nsf. Policy on dissemination and sharing research results. So It'll cover things like the types of data you're going to collect, how you expect to share it and so forth. 150 00:33:31.050 --> 00:33:32.480 Tom Martin: Um! 151 00:33:32.870 --> 00:33:40.930 Tom Martin: These policies are fully described in the links that are provided here. One of those is in the Grant proposal. Guide the pap. She, 152 00:33:40.940 --> 00:33:51.519 Tom Martin: if you're one of the proposals that gets selected for nih funding. You're going to be required to comply with the Nih data management sharing policy, and i'm going to turn it over to Dana to discuss that. 153 00:33:52.350 --> 00:34:08.000 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): So I I think my biggest piece of advice here is Number one here to follow everything above this in the links. First, because reminder that you're submitting to Nsf: This is just an fyi, as I know, investigators are really 154 00:34:08.030 --> 00:34:14.620 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): interested in, you know, making sure that they're complying with the new Nih data management, sharing policy. 155 00:34:14.770 --> 00:34:32.650 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): If your application is selected to move over to Nih, we will, in our instructions, include information about how to make sure that your application is updated to comply with this policy. The good news is that between 156 00:34:32.659 --> 00:34:47.789 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): most of the policy overlaps between the two agencies there are only a couple things that are in the Nih data management and sharing policy that are not in the Nsf policy for data management. So 157 00:34:47.980 --> 00:35:06.190 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): move forward. Put together your your application as you would for for Nss. But keep in mind that if you move on to Nih you'll be receiving information from us about how to update your your data management and sharing the way to comply with that policy. 158 00:35:08.540 --> 00:35:27.869 Tom Martin: Thanks, Dana. So, um! The other thing is, all the proposals have to include an evaluation component. And so the evaluation can target local areas. Um, The technical functioning, the validity and reliability, the usability, the impact on biomedical and health outcomes, 159 00:35:27.880 --> 00:35:35.439 Tom Martin: the evaluation should not be. And Dana said this earlier. I'm going to say it again. You should not include include a randomized clinical trial. 160 00:35:35.770 --> 00:35:52.950 Tom Martin: We're talking about things that are at a much earlier stage. A randomized clinical trial is not appropriate for the evaluation it really needs to focus on. You've You've made this advance in science or engineering. How you evaluate that advance, how you demonstrate success for the fundamental research contribution that you're making 161 00:35:54.220 --> 00:35:55.649 Tom Martin: Next I going? 162 00:35:57.680 --> 00:36:14.139 Goli Yamini: Um, Thank you, Tom and Dana. So we have. We are just going to end things with a few final comments. Um, firstly, um! We want to highlight what proposals are not appropriate for this solicitation. 163 00:36:15.370 --> 00:36:22.119 Goli Yamini: We've kind of alluded to a lot of this already, and we're going to emphasize this Again, the focus 164 00:36:22.340 --> 00:36:29.580 Goli Yamini: proposals that focus only on advancing biological biomedical or public health research, with 165 00:36:29.590 --> 00:36:48.429 Goli Yamini: Ah! Without a new fundamental science or engineering aspect. The the disciplines that we were just talking about without having their major thrust, the major contribution being those ah Nsf: science areas are not ah fit for the solicitation 166 00:36:48.440 --> 00:36:58.440 Goli Yamini: um applications that propose basically applying existing fundamental science to the to the the medical domain like 167 00:36:58.630 --> 00:37:14.620 Goli Yamini: making an app for addressing some health disparity. But that is not going to be something that is going to be reviewed. Well, here it's not a good fit if you are using Ehr data, 168 00:37:14.630 --> 00:37:33.979 Goli Yamini: if you're using that for a health purpose. But the actual what you're doing with the data. The data aspect of it is not innovative. Um. The computer science aspect of it is not innovative. That is not going to be a good fit the focus on topic has to fit the mission of the agency. So if your proposal is 169 00:37:44.780 --> 00:37:49.369 Goli Yamini: um, I want to give Dana and Tom a chance. If they have any other creative 170 00:37:49.700 --> 00:37:55.910 Goli Yamini: project. Ideals are examples that will help clarify at this point, because we really want to make sure that this is clear for everybody. 171 00:37:57.680 --> 00:38:09.660 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): My name is Glee, I think, just to reiterate what you said, using, retooling, an existing method or approach for a health use case, is not? 172 00:38:09.670 --> 00:38:20.249 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): It's going to suffice for this initiative. It is not a good fit. It would be a really good fit, perhaps, for Nih, but that is not something that would do well here, 173 00:38:20.260 --> 00:38:46.269 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): for example, um taking um something like Chat Gbt, and applying it to tech or to help with suicidal ideation or self harm that is not a good use. What are you advancing and chat? Gbt: What are you advancing in the larger area of generative Ai, and large language models? Those are the questions that are being asked, and just to sort of hammer it in 174 00:38:46.280 --> 00:39:01.659 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): health is a use case here. It takes a back seat to those core Nsf: questions of intellectual merit, broader impacts, et cetera. And how are you advancing the fundamental science areas? 175 00:39:05.920 --> 00:39:21.929 Tom Martin: And I really don't have anything to add that you guys have said it. Very well. I'll just say it again, like you have to make a fundamental contribution to science or engineering. You have to be able to state the intellectual merit and the broader impact. It's not going to be a set of specific aims like it is with the Nih proposal. 176 00:39:21.940 --> 00:39:26.439 Tom Martin: It's going to be the intellectual merit and the broader impacts. And that's what we'll carry your proposal. 177 00:39:27.840 --> 00:39:33.460 Goli Yamini: Thank you. Guys. Yeah. So if you guys didn't get it. I'm taking it for you to the third time. 178 00:39:33.830 --> 00:39:43.610 Goli Yamini: So for you, if you want examples of what is appropriate, and what has been successful, at at least in the sense of balancing these disciplines. 179 00:39:43.620 --> 00:40:09.369 Goli Yamini: Please use the resources available online. You can use our website. Look at uh, click on, search awards, and then when you go into search words you can type in Sdh, and then see um click on any of the grants to see sort of what are the kind of work that's been funded. Um. Some of the research focused areas have changed throughout the years, but you can at least see the sort of balance of the 180 00:40:12.730 --> 00:40:19.150 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): then Nih. We have reporter and similar to what Goalie, just 181 00:40:19.160 --> 00:40:36.169 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): for the Nsf. Site. If you type in under the advanced project, search in the text for Sc. In the project title, you will be able to pull up what has been funded on the Nih side. Under this initiative. 182 00:40:36.180 --> 00:40:44.050 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): What you will see, as I mentioned earlier, these applications, Don't undergo a second review. And so when you 183 00:40:44.410 --> 00:41:02.879 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): click into any of these ah grants, actually because they've been awarded What you will see is that they're still very much so written in the Nsf. Style. Um in language. It's just been updated into the different more of fucking areas for for Nih. So I highly recommend looking at that as well. 184 00:41:05.230 --> 00:41:07.450 Goli Yamini: Thank you. 185 00:41:07.630 --> 00:41:28.890 Goli Yamini: So if you want feedback on your proposals, we've talked a little about what is not a good fit. We've tried to talk a lot about what is a good fit, but if you need to get feedback, please send us a one-page summary of your proposal to sc correspondence at Nsf Dot. Go. If you go to our program page or our solicitation page, you'll see that email listed also as a way to reach us. 186 00:41:30.130 --> 00:41:32.219 Goli Yamini: Please don't send this to it, 187 00:41:32.230 --> 00:42:00.889 Goli Yamini: and a specific aims page the one-page. Summary. The guidelines are in half G. Listed in the link below. It needs to have a description of your projects. As Tom said, the intellectual merit and the broader impacts, those need to be highlighted. We really are trying to find, if it's a good fit based on where the advancement is. So these have to be highlighted and articulated. Well, um. The only thing I want to mention the only caveat is we do have a high volume of request, 188 00:42:01.190 --> 00:42:20.859 Goli Yamini: both at and Nsf. Where Tom and I are, and um ah! Some inquiries that go to and nih, although we encourage you to please send them here to us, because sometimes if you send them to Nih. They will send them to us, anyway, so just send them here. Um! There is quite a bit like there is a bit of a wait time for the turnaround time 189 00:42:20.870 --> 00:42:42.080 Goli Yamini: as we're getting through these one pages. So if you want timely feedback on your request, please send it far enough in advance, So that, given the um sort of the timeline that we're looking at for getting uh responses to you guys, that our response will actually still be helpful to you. Um, In writing your puzzle, please only to last minute. 190 00:42:42.090 --> 00:42:43.720 Goli Yamini: Um, that's basically 191 00:42:43.850 --> 00:42:47.900 Goli Yamini: our advice. Ask for help and ask early if you can. 192 00:42:48.270 --> 00:42:54.360 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): How do you want to focus on applying you go to our publication Solicitation page 193 00:42:54.370 --> 00:43:22.319 Goli Yamini: for Nih Institute specific interests you can follow the announcement here. Um, you can incorporate the nih-specific interest into the proposals. But it needs to be written in the Nsa format and include transformative science aspects again and again. So 194 00:43:22.360 --> 00:43:30.370 Goli Yamini: you can refer to the pack. G. And again you can reach us at our email, alias for any additional questions. 195 00:43:32.570 --> 00:43:35.810 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): So, Goalie, i'm just going to say um, 196 00:43:35.860 --> 00:43:58.689 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): I'd recommend for everyone to submit their one-pager early. If you don't hear back from that email, address, re ping, and for those of you who are more interested of who I talk to at Nih. My recommendation is to actually email that inbox first, with the information that Goalie 197 00:43:58.700 --> 00:44:01.050 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): um put on the screen before 198 00:44:01.460 --> 00:44:12.739 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): we work very closely with our Nsf. Colleagues, because these applications are submitted to Nsf. It is most important that what you are proposing meets 199 00:44:13.040 --> 00:44:33.379 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): the formats and the needs of the Msf. Application to get information from there about the health context and use Case, Goalie, Tom, and others at Nsf. Will then reach out to us at Nih to see if we need to have a separate one on one meeting ahead of time. 200 00:44:33.390 --> 00:44:46.729 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Do not reach out to your Nih program. Officer first, as Goalie mentioned most of the time, we will still send you back to this Nsf correspondence email which ultimately will 201 00:44:46.740 --> 00:44:55.419 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): make it longer in the queue for you. So just go there first, and then we'll loop around on the Nih side after you get that initial round of feedback. 202 00:44:56.930 --> 00:44:58.959 Goli Yamini: Thank you. 203 00:44:59.230 --> 00:45:01.850 Goli Yamini: Okay. So 204 00:45:01.910 --> 00:45:04.160 Goli Yamini: consider joining our listeners. 205 00:45:04.170 --> 00:45:34.160 Goli Yamini: Um, we send out information and updates on the program and opportunities that uh come up in the community uh through this Lister. Um, So just email us here and the instructions on how to join um. We also have an Nsa. A smart health uh reviewer list that if you're interested in serving on Nsf review panel for smart help. Uh, let us know, and we're always looking for your expertise to help us make. You know a registered program 206 00:45:34.170 --> 00:45:38.720 Goli Yamini: makes the review process better, and we can add you to that, the surf as well. So 207 00:45:39.090 --> 00:45:49.189 Goli Yamini: ah, one last note, And, Dana, if you want to close up with this one is, there is the relay between basic and applied science that we are looking at. 208 00:45:50.050 --> 00:46:13.300 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Yeah. So this it gets back to everything we've talked about. Um before these is program. Or this program is funding really fundamental science, and it's a hand off between that basic and apply. This means that not only do your questions be to sort of address that with health as a use case, but you also need to have the right team that you're moving forward as part of this application. 209 00:46:15.090 --> 00:46:16.419 Goli Yamini: It's: 210 00:46:16.900 --> 00:46:28.529 Goli Yamini: Yeah, thank you so much. Again send your questions and comments to our alias, and we are now going to move to the Q. And A. Section. We we see that there's 211 00:46:28.570 --> 00:46:46.930 Goli Yamini: eighty ninety questions that have already been posted. Um and um first off I want to say that the record I mean, I'm sure a lot of them are asking about the recording from today. So i'm just going to repeat that again. This Webinar was being recorded. It will be posted on our program page. 212 00:46:46.940 --> 00:46:57.710 Goli Yamini: Um, very shortly. We are also going to make the slides available for those who wanted, including captioning for the slides and for the 213 00:46:57.720 --> 00:47:08.819 Goli Yamini: Webinar. All right, so let's move on to Q and A. Um that any of my colleagues wanted to start by answering any questions while we kind of look through them, 214 00:47:09.850 --> 00:47:31.229 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): so I can start with a few. I'll take the first couple, and then we can sort of carry out from there. So um one is kind of proposal. Have a Pd. Or P. I. And another P. I. As is the case with Nih. Yes, um, Actually, what we see with these applications is that traditionally, they're about 215 00:47:32.020 --> 00:47:49.309 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): three Mpis or multiple pis. Um on an actual application it varies. Um. But Again, as we've mentioned before, about the team, you need to be able to articulate how each of those individuals are going to contribute to the 216 00:47:49.320 --> 00:48:00.399 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): the actual application in the project itself, and it needs to make sense. So if you don't need to have a multi-pie team, then you probably shouldn't include that in your application. 217 00:48:00.600 --> 00:48:30.180 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): The second question is, will the deadline extended? The government shutdown? Um! We cannot speak to that at this moment. Right now we are open, and we have no information about what that will look like. What you can expect, and what I would encourage is to be looking at the Nsf. Site number one for for updates. Number two is joining the Lister community as only put up on one of those last slides that will be sending out information. 218 00:48:30.190 --> 00:48:39.890 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): So right now. The The due date is November ninth. If anything were to change, you would either hear that through the lists or on the Nsf. Website 219 00:48:41.360 --> 00:48:57.510 Goli Yamini: um about the cogniz and po's of who will receive the proposal. Um, it's all going to come into the sch solicitation. Id like It's going to come into one of us. Ah me! I think. And then it's going to be moved to 220 00:48:57.530 --> 00:49:08.520 Goli Yamini: other program. Well, Nsf: program officers that are going to be handling the paneling for that particular topic. 221 00:49:09.930 --> 00:49:18.349 Goli Yamini: Um, Dana, Is there anybody in the Ai system for brain cancer research that this would go to? Where should people? 222 00:49:18.990 --> 00:49:48.269 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): So you can. You can email me on the Mci and representative for this initiative? I can put you in contact with with other program staff if it's specifically about an Ai system for brain cancer research applying through this program. I'm going to tell you to reach out to the Sdh email first with the one pager. But if it is something else that would be broader than than this initiative, and applying to another program, then Don't reach out to me 223 00:49:49.580 --> 00:50:02.339 Goli Yamini: as far as the clinical expertise, and Tom correct me if i'm wrong, but they can be covered by an international collaborator consultant. But there are restrictions on how that funding will work. Rule of thumb is, I think, twenty percent, was it? 224 00:50:02.350 --> 00:50:10.610 Yeah, I don't think there's a published number, but the rule of time, I've been told, is twenty percent. And Dana, maybe for something that's selected on the United side is there 225 00:50:10.690 --> 00:50:16.699 Tom Martin: hard and fast rule for? Is there a limit on international collaborators on the Nih side. 226 00:50:17.900 --> 00:50:22.969 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): There is not um, I would say, though. Um, 227 00:50:23.130 --> 00:50:36.069 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): there are some budgetary and other things that that apply. But I would say, if you have specific questions about that to reach out, because I think it really depends on each individual institution. 228 00:50:36.080 --> 00:50:46.829 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): The intricacies there, plus the fact that there's such a smaller proportion of these that are funded by. And nih. I don't know that that would be the focus. I would really focus on what Nsf. Policies are 229 00:50:48.000 --> 00:51:00.660 Tom Martin: and Goalie. Can I jump back to one of your earlier questions? Sorry I was trying to find the mute button I could. Somebody was asking like which pla goes to, and things like that. I'm going to give an answer That doesn't sound like a answer to that question. Which is 230 00:51:00.670 --> 00:51:04.189 Tom Martin: it? It depends a lot on your your summary like a 231 00:51:04.200 --> 00:51:22.469 Tom Martin: So this summary Sorry i'm a new Ipa. I've been here since January. One of the things I didn't realize was how important all the ways the summaries get used. Once your proposal comes in. So a well-written summary will make sure that your proposal ends up with a a similar set of of proposals to be paneled with. 232 00:51:23.510 --> 00:51:35.569 Goli Yamini: Yes, because that happens that transfer happens within the working group, so the better your summary is the the better informed that paneling is going to be so. Yes, yes, I second, third, fourth, that 233 00:51:35.800 --> 00:51:38.390 Goli Yamini: um Is there a nice salary, cap? 234 00:51:38.400 --> 00:51:39.410 Goli Yamini: There's a 235 00:51:39.680 --> 00:51:46.370 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): there is, and they will apply if your application is selected for funding by Nih. 236 00:51:46.650 --> 00:52:09.470 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): So i'm not going to speak more on that, because it really depends on whether or not you're funded by Nih. But if you are, those caps will apply. Um. The next question is about is the budget the same for nih as Nsf. And it is, and you will have to maintain the one point, two million in total costs across the length of your project, 237 00:52:09.630 --> 00:52:26.310 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): which, if you are selected for funding on the and Nih side is usually um a point in which you have to have some conversations with your program officer. Given the way the budget structuring is but most applications and applicants that come over, They're able to make those adjustments just fine. 238 00:52:27.020 --> 00:52:42.010 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): The next one is about the copi, and whether or not they're an early stage investigator under the Nih definition, which is within ten years of terminal degree, and not having a significant 239 00:52:42.290 --> 00:53:00.349 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): grant, a war like an Ro one. Um! And whether or not the an award for smart health would take away the copies early stage investigator status. If you are funded through smart health, and your application is funded by Nsf. 240 00:53:00.450 --> 00:53:17.400 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): The Co-pi's esi status would, not be impacted because you would not have received a substantial nih. To war. If, however, you are funded, and it is funded by one of the Nih Institutes or centers, and comes over 241 00:53:17.410 --> 00:53:25.849 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): that Copi would lose their early stage investigator status, because these are awarded at Nih as Ro one's 242 00:53:31.180 --> 00:53:52.650 Goli Yamini: I can take next one, so how our key house is used to be fine. So There is a a notice for my age for this message program. Um over there uh different, I see. Have their um. A key. A research area is a specific specified, not defined. So you may take a close. Go 243 00:53:52.680 --> 00:54:02.349 Yanli Wang: there and to see what are the key research topics, a research interest, you know, that are 244 00:54:03.500 --> 00:54:04.970 Yanli Wang: a spell oft. 245 00:54:05.770 --> 00:54:07.770 Yanli Wang: It's all right. I see 246 00:54:10.620 --> 00:54:24.690 Goli Yamini: there's a question about the review process. Where is they? Ask if Nsf. And and I are doing joint reviews. So the actual review is done by um pis and experts in the field. 247 00:54:24.700 --> 00:54:34.610 Goli Yamini: When we say it's done by and nih and and Nsf. The the Pds and the Sros are going to be managing the panel. But the reviews are going to be written by 248 00:54:34.880 --> 00:54:36.599 Goli Yamini: experts in the field, 249 00:54:39.000 --> 00:54:51.809 Yanli Wang: and for the question how much preliminary data analysis is expected. So the key point is that you know the preliminary data results are provided to help 250 00:54:51.820 --> 00:55:09.560 Yanli Wang: uh the the review panel to properly assess the uh likelihood on feasibility of your project. Also to evaluate the capability to carry out the proposed research. Just keep that in mind, and use your own judgment to see how much data. 251 00:55:10.870 --> 00:55:24.949 Tom Martin: Yeah, yeah. Only let me add to that. So you need to provide evidence that your proposal is going to be that your your plan of research is going to be successful. Preliminary data is is one form of that evidence, but it's not the only form. 252 00:55:24.960 --> 00:55:32.359 Tom Martin: So you don't have to have preliminary data. There could be other ways to show the evidence that what you're proposing to do will be successful. 253 00:55:34.230 --> 00:55:51.289 Goli Yamini: Um, there's a question about how it's determined. If a grant gets funded by Nsf. Or Nih, and if it can be by both or not, and the applicants get to choose, so it either gets funded by Nih or Nsf. Um. Then there's nothing that the applicant can 254 00:55:51.300 --> 00:56:06.760 Goli Yamini: do to choose Um, Dana, Do you want to talk about how the Nih process works. As we explain. We pass along the scoring and the reviews, and we release them to the Pis and then to Nih, and they go from there. But if there's any information you want to add, 255 00:56:07.340 --> 00:56:23.180 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Yeah, so there's no selection um sort of or rights that the the applicants have to determine which agency they go to by submitting. You sort of understand that you could end up being funded by Nsf. 256 00:56:23.290 --> 00:56:29.879 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Funding by Nih, or not funded at all, or those are really your three three options. 257 00:56:29.980 --> 00:56:44.449 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): I will say that what we see with these scores and panel is that what the review criteria are for nih, and how those applications score 258 00:56:44.460 --> 00:57:01.890 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): do not align all the time with what the score is from an Nsf. Perspective. And so, when we go through the selection process There isn't much fighting between Nsf and Nih about the proposals that each agency wants to fund, 259 00:57:05.290 --> 00:57:14.199 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): and there is a question about the reviewers in these panels, and the reviewers in the panel are those who 260 00:57:14.250 --> 00:57:43.469 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): our have more of an Nsf. One. There are some with um, some health expertise, and but we increasingly, as this program has evolved since it is going into its tenth year. We now have a pretty big community of individuals who now have gone through this program, and um have worked on both the traditional Nfl side and the Mih side. And so we also have a lot of those reviewers that are in detail as well. 261 00:57:43.480 --> 00:57:53.579 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): We're able to bridge both of these areas and and speak to both the health application as well as the broader impacts of intellectual merit. 262 00:57:55.420 --> 00:58:12.500 Goli Yamini: Um! As far as how often I I see a few ah questions about how, if this is a year? But this is a yearly program, and the solicitation right now is active for the next three years. So we just published in your solicitation so up to twenty twenty-six, 263 00:58:13.960 --> 00:58:31.199 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): and in terms of how many awards will be funded by the Nsf. And by Nih. That really depends on the availability of funds and the merit of the proposals that are received, and so that can vary each year. There's not a set amount or number that are funded. 264 00:58:31.830 --> 00:58:43.459 Goli Yamini: Um Again, about the team. There's questions. If there should be a medical document, if, like the how your team is made up is going to influence whether you're going to be funded by Nih or Nsf. And that's irrelevant, as we, 265 00:58:43.490 --> 00:59:01.359 Goli Yamini: I think we mentioned before you. The who you include on your team is really determined by your project, and especially the clinical aspect of it, and all that stuff. Um! The makeup of your team is not going to be at all important in which 266 00:59:01.370 --> 00:59:03.800 Goli Yamini: who gets picked up by N. And Ms. Up the 267 00:59:05.650 --> 00:59:14.429 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): There's a question about how many proposals are submitted, and that's not public information. I think that you can just 268 00:59:14.440 --> 00:59:26.139 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): you can gather, there's quite a number that are submitted each year, based off of the number of directorates of Nsf. And the participation across Um nihs to centers and offices, 269 00:59:26.540 --> 00:59:30.780 Goli Yamini: and again, no um clinical trials. 270 00:59:30.910 --> 00:59:32.339 Goli Yamini: That was one of the questions 271 00:59:35.050 --> 00:59:39.850 Goli Yamini: our support letters recommended from clinical collaborators. Um, 272 00:59:41.070 --> 00:59:44.729 Goli Yamini: yes, I think collaboration letters and support letters. 273 00:59:44.760 --> 00:59:49.569 Goli Yamini: Essentially, your collaboration plan needs to be solid, 274 00:59:50.100 --> 00:59:53.019 Goli Yamini: and you need to have support from all the important people. 275 00:59:53.310 --> 00:59:57.499 Tom Martin: But I would add to that you should look at the the 276 00:59:57.510 --> 01:00:14.510 Tom Martin: that has a description of what's allowed for a support letter. It can't be. This research is going to be great. I really look forward to seeing this research. It's got to be There's an unfunding collaboration, and that's been mentioned in the proposal, and the person is saying, Yes, um, I will participate in the way that's described in the proposed. 277 01:00:18.030 --> 01:00:32.959 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): There's a question about should Pis only target the Msf. Evaluation criteria in writing the proposal, or if A. P. Is writing a proposal that our targets an Nih institute, should the proposal target, nih evaluation criteria, 278 01:00:32.970 --> 01:00:58.979 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): you are submitting your application to Nsf thus you should be targeting the Nsf. Criteria. The nih criteria are not important. Again, you are submitting your application to Nsf. And it is undergoing review at Nsf. With participation of an nih sro, and it will receive that score. But ultimately the Nsf. Criteria trumps Nih 279 01:00:59.040 --> 01:01:16.489 Tom Martin: And I will add to that as well what's going to happen is the reviewers will be asked, What are the strengths and weaknesses of the intellectual, and what are the strengths and weaknesses of the broader impact amongst other things. But those will be the two lead questions in their review that they'll write. So you really should address those in your proposal. 280 01:01:17.380 --> 01:01:18.609 Goli Yamini: It's 281 01:01:18.770 --> 01:01:28.390 Goli Yamini: again, the Webinar will be available online, and as far as two pis from the same Institute being able to be on one application, I don't think we have anything against that. 282 01:01:28.400 --> 01:01:42.100 Tom Martin: We want to see collaboration. We want to see varied um. You know all the disciplines that are important for your project to be involved. But there's no mandate on them, being from different institutes, 283 01:01:44.040 --> 01:01:47.170 Goli Yamini: Henry Daysby's single-pier proposals yet. 284 01:01:47.270 --> 01:01:50.930 Goli Yamini: But can they actually tell? No, It is a collaboration? 285 01:01:50.940 --> 01:01:57.890 Tom Martin: Well, in theory you could have a singing if they were somehow another an expert in the house 286 01:01:57.900 --> 01:02:03.089 Tom Martin: in the two areas. They were going to make the the science and engineering advances in, 287 01:02:03.100 --> 01:02:05.519 Tom Martin: but in practice 288 01:02:06.650 --> 01:02:08.369 that's not very likely, 289 01:02:08.380 --> 01:02:17.160 Goli Yamini: right? So there's no limit or restrictions on whom you serve as A. P. I ever sort of limit the number of institutions. So 290 01:02:19.100 --> 01:02:27.779 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): so here's a question for the Nsf team. What is this suggested? Proposed? Start date that they should put in their applications 291 01:02:28.050 --> 01:02:30.799 these six months after the submission date 292 01:02:30.960 --> 01:02:32.080 Tom Martin: A. 293 01:02:32.460 --> 01:02:35.989 Tom Martin: And a couple of months. Beyond that we would probably also be good. 294 01:02:36.000 --> 01:02:40.239 Goli Yamini: Yeah, but that is also something that can be changed later. 295 01:02:40.250 --> 01:02:53.080 Tom Martin: Yeah. But when we get closer to the awards, it's not like you're married to that date. Um, but but we do want to see. You know it relevant. But if the word process gets delayed that start they can get 296 01:02:53.320 --> 01:02:56.890 Tom Martin: Yeah. But but anything less than six months is is unrealistic. 297 01:02:56.900 --> 01:02:57.700 Goli Yamini: Yeah. 298 01:02:58.200 --> 01:03:02.830 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Same thing. If you move over to Mih, we can modify the start date as well. So 299 01:03:08.000 --> 01:03:19.530 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): another question is about the two fundamental areas within a potential bullet such as computer science, math or robotics. And Nlp. Is that allowed? 300 01:03:21.180 --> 01:03:22.589 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): It? Answers gas. 301 01:03:22.600 --> 01:03:23.689 Tom Martin: Yes, yes, 302 01:03:23.700 --> 01:03:28.290 Goli Yamini: related. I was looking at it. I almost thought you were answering my question, but I was looking at 303 01:03:28.300 --> 01:03:43.669 Goli Yamini: It was like, Can Can it one be Ai and the other area the advancement in health. No, the two areas have to be Nsf: So Ai and math, with the contribution to be made at home. So the research itself can be in help. 304 01:03:46.900 --> 01:03:55.260 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): So there's a question about the early safe investigator status, and if that's concerned during the review process, and 305 01:03:55.470 --> 01:04:25.410 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): would someone was there? Yes, I status, as I said, or if you're funded by nih you, what was your esi status in terms of the review process? It is not discussed during the review. Um about esi status. However, when applications are percentile and score the program staff do look at their respective institute or central pay lines, and they would apply the Esi pay line to those applications 306 01:04:25.420 --> 01:04:28.359 that would qualify under the Esi status. 307 01:04:34.640 --> 01:04:45.399 Goli Yamini: More questions on timeline. Again, proposals do we're looking at a minimum six months to a year. It may even go up to as late as December if it goes to an age 308 01:04:45.650 --> 01:04:46.720 Goli Yamini: funding. 309 01:04:47.910 --> 01:05:11.810 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): So someone asked about um the discussion on clinical trials. Um! Should there be or not be trials in a puzzle? And I think the clarification is we're talking about no randomized Uh Randomized control trials or Rcts large scale sort of interventions that you would typically see in a large Mih Ro one 310 01:05:12.070 --> 01:05:20.000 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): we have seen, though based off of the Nih definition of a clinical trial. When you come over to Nih, you're 311 01:05:20.010 --> 01:05:32.179 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): ah Project proposal may have components that are classified under the nih definition of a clinical trial. We are not excluding those. We are just saying that 312 01:05:32.190 --> 01:05:44.359 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): these large-scale studies are not going to be one A good fit nor would you be able to do them with the budget of this program. And so we strongly 313 01:05:44.490 --> 01:05:50.210 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): discourage any of that coming through again. These are supposed to be demonstration projects, 314 01:05:50.490 --> 01:05:55.920 Goli Yamini: and so you probably need some preliminary data like there was a question about that, but 315 01:05:56.600 --> 01:05:57.690 Goli Yamini: it would help. 316 01:05:57.700 --> 01:06:00.090 Goli Yamini: So this is yeah, it is a big deal. 317 01:06:15.440 --> 01:06:35.179 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): So how is it determined which projects move to Nih. It depends on the Nih score and percentile and alignment with Nih. I see a specific interest which are outlined in the notice that we've provided in the presentation. 318 01:06:35.480 --> 01:06:45.940 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): But again, just reiterate it that there is no involvement from the pis and sort of pushing either way where their application ends up, 319 01:06:46.600 --> 01:06:48.489 Goli Yamini: and more questions about. 320 01:06:48.500 --> 01:07:03.490 Goli Yamini: Yes, some of them will be funded by some of them will be funded by Nih, and who will decide? That is the Nih uh Institute and Centers and the Nsf side, based on the problematic consideration to start after 321 01:07:14.890 --> 01:07:34.510 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): so dangerous compared to the solicitation from previous years. Um! Some of the thematic areas have changed with this solicitation. The policies and procedures have updated to be in accordance with anything that has changed in the past several years at Nsf. 322 01:07:34.520 --> 01:07:41.699 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): And highlighting today as well. For example, the new Nih data management and sharing plan. 323 01:07:41.770 --> 01:07:50.870 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): But the budget, for example, has not changed. Nor has the overall sort of theme of 324 01:07:50.950 --> 01:08:02.590 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): the overall solicitation and what we're trying to achieve with this initiative and the requirements of having a health, 325 01:08:02.600 --> 01:08:18.300 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): you know, advancing health within two, but making two um sort of fundamental science and technology contributions. So overall the goals of the program have remained the same. But some of the specifics in the thematic areas are really would have changed. 326 01:08:41.840 --> 01:08:53.980 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): I will say there is a question about success of one versus multiple, and I think we've seen both the come through and have 327 01:08:54.520 --> 01:09:05.529 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): a lot of multiple pi's. That's a big portion of what comes in through smart health. But we do have a lot of single pis. And in those single pi applications, though, that you do have 328 01:09:05.540 --> 01:09:18.280 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): collaborators in other areas that are contributing a significant amount of time, and that is outlined in their collaboration plan as well. So it depends on how you want to structure your application. 329 01:09:18.760 --> 01:09:24.789 Goli Yamini: Thank you for that clarification, Because when I was thinking, because yeah, we constantly thinking it could be 330 01:09:24.800 --> 01:09:28.540 Goli Yamini: Yeah, it has to be. It depends on the collaboration 331 01:09:28.550 --> 01:09:29.450 Goli Yamini: to 332 01:09:30.149 --> 01:09:31.450 Goli Yamini: It's 333 01:09:44.399 --> 01:10:01.279 Goli Yamini: um. And here's someone's asking, How important is it to explain how the research specifically can translate into health impact. If your health problem is not clear, it'll it'll reduce the the sort of 334 01:10:01.440 --> 01:10:09.950 Goli Yamini: the impact rating of the panel of your proposal. So if you, if you're not, you don't, have a clear health 335 01:10:12.630 --> 01:10:20.150 Goli Yamini: in mind that will that usually works against you. So there needs to be a 336 01:10:20.350 --> 01:10:23.649 Goli Yamini: clear health, a problem that this is applying to. 337 01:10:26.840 --> 01:10:33.620 Goli Yamini: But again, it has to be in the main science, this of limbs that we listed just with the impact being in health 338 01:10:43.320 --> 01:11:00.359 Goli Yamini: and international collaborators, all are allowed. But there's um limitations on funding and Asf Doesn't usually like to give direct funds to international partners, and the rule of thumb is about twenty percent. So um! There's more to look into for that as far as 339 01:11:01.110 --> 01:11:03.110 Goli Yamini: international partnerships 340 01:11:07.700 --> 01:11:21.539 Goli Yamini: again, the two fundamental areas, one cannot be by medical science. It has to be the four disciplines that we talked about computer science, engineering, social behavioral sciences And 341 01:11:21.560 --> 01:11:25.000 Goli Yamini: for Mps. 342 01:11:40.330 --> 01:11:56.109 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): So there's a question about the academic salary for Pis and Kopi's, and that's not not normally allow from Nsf. But is permitted for for nih um. Golly, and Tom, do you want to speak to the 343 01:11:56.120 --> 01:12:00.770 side of salaries? And then I can speak to the nih. 344 01:12:03.830 --> 01:12:07.090 Goli Yamini: I was a little bit more experience in the salaries. 345 01:12:07.410 --> 01:12:12.620 Yeah, no. Normally, it's limited to total support of up to two months 346 01:12:12.930 --> 01:12:14.939 across all your nsf funding. 347 01:12:15.250 --> 01:12:22.800 Tom Martin: So if you were selected for funding, then we would check to make sure that, given all your other active awards, that you didn't go above two months, 348 01:12:23.780 --> 01:12:33.529 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): and then on the Nih side the normal sort of salary limitations apply. And usually what happens is it's actually those 349 01:12:33.650 --> 01:12:50.719 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): that allotment is a bit different. And so there is some modification that occurs not in the total cost of the budget, but the actual dollar amounts especially for salaries that occur when you make that transition over to Nih. 350 01:12:55.490 --> 01:13:21.380 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): If we're interested in reviewing, how do we get on the Lister that is included in the slides? Um, that that Goalie uh put up earlier. You can probably also email the uh Sch email address as well, and let them know that you're interested. I would also suggest putting in there. Um information about um, your expertise, and maybe even attaching a Cv. 351 01:13:21.890 --> 01:13:25.449 Goli Yamini: That would always help. Yes, and we could um 352 01:13:25.620 --> 01:13:36.140 Goli Yamini: ask you for other panels as well that are small, smart health, or health, or informatics, or something like that related. So thank and thank you for. 353 01:13:36.510 --> 01:13:41.579 Goli Yamini: Thank you for those who are interested. I want to volunteer. That really makes a big difference for us. 354 01:13:44.440 --> 01:14:02.580 Goli Yamini: The limit for pis and go pis on a proposal is two. I will. I can copy, paste the area into solicitation. But please go look at the the Eligibility Information section of the solicitation. Ah! For the types of organizations and a number of pis. 355 01:14:04.820 --> 01:14:10.320 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): So there's another budgetary question about the indirect cost rate. 356 01:14:10.480 --> 01:14:16.549 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): I don't know, Tom, if you want to comment on that from an Nsf. Perspective, 357 01:14:16.850 --> 01:14:27.559 Tom Martin: Yeah, I saw that off the top of my head. I don't know of any limits on the indirect rate. I think that's negotiated between the Federal Government and the institution, 358 01:14:28.670 --> 01:14:34.929 Tom Martin: and I don't think there's a limit on the number from an institution. Either. There's just a limit on the on the pis, 359 01:14:35.010 --> 01:14:36.869 Tom Martin: on the number for fi. 360 01:14:48.630 --> 01:15:04.670 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): What type of feedback may individuals get on their one pager? Will we say something like Don't? Send this at all, or you didn't make something clear. It's important, since the same work idea may be presented very differently in a one Pager: 361 01:15:05.910 --> 01:15:23.850 Tom Martin: Yeah, So I have I've been hailing most of these. I sorry I can't speak for Golie. I have yet to send a Don't. Send this at all. I have since a few. I don't know what your intellectual merit, and your broader impacts are like you have to say what your contributions are to to two areas of science or engineering. 362 01:15:23.960 --> 01:15:27.990 Tom Martin: I usually I tend to ask a lot of questions. Um. So 363 01:15:28.000 --> 01:15:43.780 Goli Yamini: yeah, honestly, the one some of the only times that we say, don't send this to our semester. Nih is. But it's very clearly a health health, Oriented proposal where there really is very little computer science or any of the other science fields that we talk about, we say, 364 01:15:45.220 --> 01:15:47.019 Goli Yamini: unless there is that 365 01:15:47.430 --> 01:15:55.500 Goli Yamini: computer science advancements like It's not going to be a good fit. We try to be as gentle as possible about it, but the only outright nose I've had, 366 01:15:55.510 --> 01:16:09.150 Goli Yamini: or that, or if it's like an institute that is not qualified to apply, or something like that. So I would really recommend. Please read the solicitation before putting in the time to write it on pager. If you 367 01:16:09.200 --> 01:16:13.230 Goli Yamini: in an institute that doesn't qualify for applying or things like that. 368 01:16:14.880 --> 01:16:37.330 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): I've sent a number of these on over the years, and I will say I have told many that I am not able to deduce what their intellectual merit and broader impacts are, and that either the format itself is written like it's specific aims and whatnot, and that's not going 369 01:16:38.580 --> 01:17:06.759 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): received at an Nsf: Well, or that um actually, even if you can deduce from that um one pager in the incorrect four that we're irrespective of that, it's still not going to be applicable to smart health. So I have seen a a bunch of those over the years, and I think, as Boy and Tom said, try to be. We try to be gentle about it. Um, from what we say. But um, 370 01:17:07.040 --> 01:17:11.939 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): you really need to have the intellectual merit and broader impacts. 371 01:17:12.900 --> 01:17:18.910 Goli Yamini: Yeah, we bit, but we also don't want to waste your time right? We want you to be successful. So 372 01:17:22.340 --> 01:17:45.829 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): there's a question here about subc contracting to industry partners so outsourcing to um a virtual reality, environment for therapeutic intervention purposes, for example. So before I I hand it to you, going in time to to fully answer this, i'll say, this is as this reads, for example, this is something where I immediately look at this and go. 373 01:17:45.840 --> 01:18:13.890 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): What is novel and what's smart health about this. Ah, this potential product! Ah, Project, if you already have a virtual reality, environment, and ah! In this case, if you were going to be doing a therapeutic intervention that is most likely out of scope for this. Again, these are demonstration projects. So what's novel about the virtual reality? And then the size and scale of what it is you can be proposing here. But to the actual 374 01:18:13.900 --> 01:18:17.239 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): question about subcontracting the industry, Golly and Tom 375 01:18:18.320 --> 01:18:21.490 Tom Martin: Dana, you gave a very good answer, because the answer is, 376 01:18:21.500 --> 01:18:22.190 Tom Martin: yes, 377 01:18:22.200 --> 01:18:39.670 Tom Martin: you could. You could have a subcontract industry. But the question is going to be. You know what's the contribution there, and it probably shouldn't be too big a fraction of the budget. Let's say it's not Vr. For a second. Let's say 378 01:18:39.740 --> 01:18:52.780 Tom Martin: there you were doing one of the the novel. Ah cyber physical system substrates that I mentioned earlier, and you need some manufacturing to occur. You, don't have the capabilities to do that that would be a reason to do it. So 379 01:18:53.040 --> 01:18:58.689 Tom Martin: So it's allowed. You're just going to have to justify it. It's going to have to make sense in the context of your research plan. 380 01:19:00.050 --> 01:19:10.690 Goli Yamini: I think some of the materials like you mentioned something, Tom, about. Well, I think that's more of the University side of sort of what our eligible costs and stuff like that for some of the so i'm not going to get into that. But 381 01:19:10.700 --> 01:19:23.780 Tom Martin: the true answer is Yes, and I think you guys covered everything there. Um, I wanted to touch, based on actually an important question that I just saw, and I think is important, which is about resubmission. 382 01:19:24.010 --> 01:19:43.660 Goli Yamini: So the question is whether resubmission of proposals, if there's any difference between a new submission and a a resubmission, and if they have to respond to your comments from the previous run. So this is where we kind of have a storage difference between Nih and Nsf. And how we handle reviews. 383 01:19:43.670 --> 01:19:49.419 Goli Yamini: The proposals that come into this program are reviewed by Nsf. Now the 384 01:19:49.430 --> 01:20:18.949 Goli Yamini: we have, we have records of your previous submissions, and once the reviews are done. The um program directors bring those into consideration, and for this sort of next level assessment we consider that resubmission factor, and sometimes in some proposals people may refer to sort of like. I did this before I'm doing this from this I found this, and i'm doing this now, and sort of setting up the the project. But it is not that the same way that an age proposals, 385 01:20:18.960 --> 01:20:21.190 resubmission works where 386 01:20:21.550 --> 01:20:27.509 the review panel that you have. You're going to get at Nsf. Is not going to see your previous proposal. 387 01:20:27.890 --> 01:20:39.770 Goli Yamini: They're not going to see the comments from the reviewers. It's not going to be like. Oh, they were told this: it is not going to be the same people. It's not going to go back to the same reviewers, so it 388 01:20:39.780 --> 01:20:43.180 Goli Yamini: ninety nine point nine percent of the time 389 01:20:43.700 --> 01:20:47.040 Goli Yamini: it we we probably won't even have any 390 01:20:47.050 --> 01:20:55.869 Goli Yamini: reviewers in common. So it's going to be a whole new panel and a whole new Review, and although addressing some of those 391 01:20:56.070 --> 01:21:01.709 Goli Yamini: reviewer comments, is going to help you, it's not going to necessarily be seen by the reviewers. 392 01:21:01.720 --> 01:21:10.609 Goli Yamini: Now, when we do our reviews, and that's what we ask of our reviewers. And hopefully, when you are we were, you will be asked This as well is, 393 01:21:11.360 --> 01:21:28.660 Goli Yamini: Please make it as constructive and as productive as possible. So we want you to get useful reviews you want. We want you to get and and summaries. We want you to get, you know, help in if you want to resubmit. But it's not going to have that continuity in the and Nsf. Side. 394 01:21:29.860 --> 01:21:33.059 Goli Yamini: I don't know if you want to add anything Tom or Dana about, 395 01:21:33.410 --> 01:21:35.000 Goli Yamini: he's 396 01:21:36.550 --> 01:21:43.010 Goli Yamini: okay. Yeah, this Isn't: A: This is a Nsf: proposal Nsf: program. And those are the 397 01:21:43.190 --> 01:21:48.080 Goli Yamini: review processes that are going to guide. You know all this whole decision process. 398 01:21:49.470 --> 01:22:04.889 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): I will say there is ah one question that I think is really important. It's about Sttr and sbir and options for those who'd be interested. Um. Unfortunately for this solicitation, 399 01:22:05.040 --> 01:22:09.230 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): individuals coming in through that mechanism or not, Oh, wow! 400 01:22:09.590 --> 01:22:20.379 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): We're not allowed in the small businesses, for example, to apply. If you are a small business, you can apply to the normal sort of 401 01:22:20.390 --> 01:22:50.169 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Sdr. A funding call for either Nsf or Nih. But in terms of whether or not the work funded by this mechanism can be commercialized. Yes, and we have seen that number of the The applicant teams that have been funded through this make it all the way through, not only commercializing, but having Fda approval and even being bought by commercial and industry as well. So there are options outside of this, and we see that this is, uh 402 01:22:50.180 --> 01:22:54.849 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): this addition of being a launching point for for some of those investigative teams. 403 01:22:56.590 --> 01:23:00.189 Goli Yamini: There is a question about Irb, 404 01:23:00.410 --> 01:23:18.769 Goli Yamini: and I wanted to see if I could get you guys to help on answering that one, because the reason they're asking is that demonstrations are fine, and the randomized criminal trials are not in scope. But, uh, does this imply that Irb studies are out of scope, and if not, how should we think about what might be, except or what it may not be? 405 01:23:24.170 --> 01:23:35.240 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Yeah, so um. Your subject is allowed under smart health. We have a number of applicant teams and funded awards that have irb sort of um 406 01:23:35.430 --> 01:23:47.689 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): sort of requirements with them, and you should be prepared to to meet the the regulatory sort of statutes for your irps with this. 407 01:23:48.400 --> 01:23:57.990 Goli Yamini: Yes, I I was going to say, Yeah, we will need ah updated our be approvals and stuff like that for for those that include them. But, Tom, do you want to expand on that? 408 01:23:58.000 --> 01:24:11.400 Tom Martin: And I was just going to say the demonstrations can still require. I to be approved because you're using human subjects to collect the data from them. That's not necessarily the scale or randomized control 409 01:24:11.630 --> 01:24:21.950 Tom Martin: trial that we have in mind like when we're talking when we're talking about those types of trials and the solicitation. What we really mean is we've already got the device ready, and you're just trying to 410 01:24:22.090 --> 01:24:24.500 Tom Martin: to prove it's efficacy. Um! 411 01:24:25.050 --> 01:24:42.109 Tom Martin: What's appropriate is I've you know I've got this um proposed device that I want to establish that it actually works, and you know it's feasibility. And so I need to recruit subjects for that, or I need to do some sort of experimentation on that that would be subject to I or B. But it doesn't 412 01:24:42.120 --> 01:24:45.560 the level of random randomized control trial 413 01:24:54.900 --> 01:25:04.230 Goli Yamini: all right. We have about five more minutes left of the a lot of time. So I wonder if anybody in our group i'm going to give time to 414 01:25:04.530 --> 01:25:15.060 Goli Yamini: um others. I don't know. I think Jim left. But on me, if there's any other questions that you felt were important to to bring out for everyone. 415 01:25:22.430 --> 01:25:25.830 Tom Martin: Sorry, Golie. I'm trying to scan down through the questions 416 01:25:26.000 --> 01:25:29.570 Tom Martin: and get the I and I think you are too trying to get the low-hanging fruit 417 01:25:29.680 --> 01:25:30.809 Tom Martin: it's. 418 01:25:32.590 --> 01:25:47.219 Goli Yamini: Um! So some of the some of the questions as I'm. Just skimming through them, are are kind of project-specific and oh, i'm in this field is this appropriate? I mean that for those priests in this one pages. Please reach out to the Amy, alias Um. 419 01:25:47.240 --> 01:25:50.890 Goli Yamini: I don't think a lot of them we can answer without knowing where 420 01:25:50.990 --> 01:25:53.240 Goli Yamini: you know, having more context 421 01:25:56.550 --> 01:26:07.239 Goli Yamini: again, our in an email. And this is Sp: correspondence at Nsf: Gov: And I think we can put that in the chat for everyone. 422 01:26:07.700 --> 01:26:27.619 Yanli Wang: Yeah. Here also there is a A, you know, a a few questions relating. I seem to my issue. So people are asking or asking about, you know if the uh the application is not revealed? Well by an is there going to be like still a chance for an age to pick it up? 423 01:26:27.680 --> 01:26:42.929 Yanli Wang: And then the another question. But from you know, basically the same um same concern here. So may you clarify the following process. So if the proposal will be set on it, and, I said, joined me. 424 01:26:42.940 --> 01:27:01.139 Yanli Wang: Does it require that the funding proposal must meet the foundable score from both the nation and Sf. What if the proposal received the foundable score from only one of the falls, it is considering to be founded, so some I would like to clarify, 425 01:27:02.510 --> 01:27:15.990 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): so it doesn't need to have a fundable score from both agencies. And to be honest, when Nih looks at the scores, we are not looking at what 426 01:27:16.000 --> 01:27:36.390 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): scores are Ns. And I highly doubt but I won't see for my nsf colleagues that the the same happens in in reverse. So um you again. You don't need to have a fundamental score for both both agencies will end up, I I believe, at least on the Nih. We are only looking at the 427 01:27:36.400 --> 01:27:53.240 Tom Martin: right, and and what I will say is having sat in on a bunch of the panels. Is there tends to be a a good correlation between the and Nsf. Ratings and the and I Age stores, but it's not a perfect correlation, and that 428 01:27:53.250 --> 01:28:07.620 Tom Martin: the easiest thing to point out is um The broader impacts matter heavily to the Nsf. Rating, but less heavily, You know, don't factor in to the Nih rating so that you can end up with differences in scores that way, so something that 429 01:28:07.630 --> 01:28:14.130 Tom Martin: that's chosen for funding for the Nih might not have done that might not have been the top of the heat for the Nsf. And vice versa, 430 01:28:16.750 --> 01:28:23.090 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): if I if I said something there that put words in the Nih's mouth feel free to 431 01:28:23.100 --> 01:28:24.369 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): you like your 432 01:28:25.480 --> 01:28:29.229 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): I do see a question here, though, that I think um 433 01:28:29.240 --> 01:28:51.740 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): is important, which is about limitations to the health use case, And do they have to be limited to one, or can they have multiple use cases, and I've seen both. And I think that it depends on what it is you're proposing and making sure you articulate that in your proposal. So, for example, I've seen applications come through in which 434 01:28:51.870 --> 01:29:11.459 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): they are developing a device for a specific health context. It wouldn't make sense to boil the ocean and include others, whereas potentially, on the flip side of that there are novels, pipelines, data, linkage approaches, analytical methods that are being developed. 435 01:29:11.470 --> 01:29:31.449 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): They're using different health context and use cases through different data sets or and whatnot to demonstrate that approach. But usually, even if they are, there are multiple, there are some way, and this is not 436 01:29:31.460 --> 01:29:40.169 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): all or nothing. I've seen both. But for the most part they're somewhat interrelated, like the cardiovascular aspects of 437 01:29:40.610 --> 01:29:42.070 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): you, 438 01:29:42.100 --> 01:29:55.899 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): mon cardinal infraction to cardiovascular related issues in Alzheimer's disease or cardiotoxicity and cancer says there is an underlying theme, even though multiple data sets are being used. 439 01:29:55.910 --> 01:30:00.030 Goli Yamini: Some of them Sometimes the method can be applied to several house 440 01:30:00.200 --> 01:30:08.590 Goli Yamini: problems, like, for example, in some of the imaging projects like you can develop something for imaging the brain for 441 01:30:08.600 --> 01:30:19.890 Goli Yamini: so and so problem. But then it did get us expanded like it could be. The primary focus could be vision, but then it could be expanded to hearing or other array of health issues. 442 01:30:19.900 --> 01:30:47.580 Goli Yamini: That sort of expansion and broader impact of the project is something that we value. So if the health area is the method that you're posing. If the advancement that you're making can contribute, we'll have to have one primary health goal that's usually those usually do better. But then, if it expands and it can be applied to other areas by all means like, let us know and say that this is expandable, and this is advancing the field 443 01:30:47.590 --> 01:30:54.089 Goli Yamini: which will be applied to all these mental health areas in that sense. 444 01:31:01.250 --> 01:31:12.210 Goli Yamini: So if the proposal is ah selected by Nih, do they have to rewrite the proposal for Nhs guidelines. There's going to be a little bit of that. But can you? 445 01:31:12.510 --> 01:31:14.870 Goli Yamini: They explain that Dana or Young? 446 01:31:15.750 --> 01:31:24.980 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): So there's uh some modifications that have to happen, but generally the content um of what's being proposed is is not really modified. 447 01:31:25.260 --> 01:31:45.089 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): It's just filling into the new new areas and then modifying the budgets. I wouldn't worry as much about that. You will get very detailed instructions from Nih and Nsf. If your application moves forward that i'll help you move through that process, 448 01:31:45.100 --> 01:32:04.620 Yanli Wang: and sometimes people ask about the page image, and so I mean, correct me if i'm wrong in that. So here. We try to be generous, so only it requires your rate requires in five page as the limit. However, if you know for this proposal, if it's a fifteen times we will take it 449 01:32:04.930 --> 01:32:07.109 Yanli Wang: without asking Pi to 450 01:32:07.880 --> 01:32:09.169 Yanli Wang: the of the people 451 01:32:09.830 --> 01:32:11.409 Yanli Wang: on research strategy. 452 01:32:13.760 --> 01:32:23.989 Goli Yamini: We are past four thirty now, so in case I don't want people who had questions that you know they only I mean, 453 01:32:24.450 --> 01:32:38.640 Goli Yamini: I don't want people to miss the answers to the question. So I kind of want to stop things right now and um encourage everyone if you have. If your question Wasn't answered, If you have additional questions, reach us at our ah email at Ni and and himself. 454 01:32:38.650 --> 01:32:56.159 Goli Yamini: Um, and I wanted to take this time to thank everybody. Thank my colleagues, Tom and Dana and Yali, David Ria Um and Jim and our and Nsf. Ah. Coordinators that are helping those drivers. So thank you all so much. Um! 455 01:32:56.170 --> 01:32:59.389 Goli Yamini: Good luck with the proposals. Everyone happy reading. 456 01:32:59.580 --> 01:33:05.239 Goli Yamini: Um, and we will hear from you in the in our email in our inbox. 457 01:33:06.360 --> 01:33:07.969 Dana Wolff Hughes (NIH/NCI): Thanks, everybody. 458 01:33:08.050 --> 01:33:09.240 Tom Martin: But 459 01:33:10.170 --> 01:33:11.629 Yanli Wang: thank you. Everyone.