Pilot projects and service awards

COBRE Neuroscience Research Service Award Program

The Institute for Neuroscience is taking requests for applications for up to $5000 for the use of COBRE Core services for neuroscience-related research. Requests from any department will be considered, but applicants must be eligible to receive federal funding as a UNR Primary Investigator. Funds must be spent before May 31, 2025. Review of applications will begin November 1, 2024. Proposals submitted after the due date will be considered, while funds are available. Submission of a request is not a guarantee of funding. Proposals will be reviewed by the Pilot Project Program Director, Professor Jacqueline Walsh-Snow, together with the COBRE Core Directors. Applicants will be notified via email regarding their application status.

Center for Integrative Neuroscience: Request for Pilot Project Proposals

The University of Nevada Reno’s Center for Integrative Neuroscience (an NIH COBRE Award) invites applications for one-year pilot project grants to support the development of new research projects in neuroscience. Proposals may request up to $40,000 in direct costs with a projected start date of June 1, 2025.

Applicants are required to submit a brief (2-page max) Pre-Proposal that describes the proposed research. Pre-proposals will be reviewed by the Program Directors and a pool of applications will be selected to submit full Pilot Project Proposals. Advancement to full proposal is not a guarantee of funding. Applicants are required to leverage one or more of the COBRE Core Facilities.

Important dates

Proposal Milestones
Event Date
Pre-proposal submission deadline Friday, Nov 1, 2024 at 5 p.m. PST
Notification of advancement to full project proposal Monday, Dec 2, 2024
Full proposal submission deadline Friday, Jan 31, 2025 at 5 p.m. PST
Notification of successful full proposals* Monday, March 3, 2025
Grant period begins Sunday, June 1, 2025

*Selected proposals will be forwarded to NIH for review. Awards are contingent on NIH approval.

Eligibility

We welcome applications for proposals that will advance the University’s research imprint within the broadly defined discipline of neuroscience. Applications from junior faculty are encouraged, but submissions from mid-career or established faculty will also be considered. Proposals from established faculty must not be an extension of the PI’s previous work and must document how the proposed work reflects a new direction for the PI. Co-PIs are allowable. Interdisciplinary projects that include teams that span different academic departments are encouraged. Use of COBRE CORE facilities is required. Applications will not be considered from individuals with current major grant or contract funding, and investigators cannot receive simultaneous support from two different sources of IDEA (e.g., COBRE, INBRE or CTR-IN) funding. All applicants must include plans for a project mentor (see Just In Time Information, below).

To apply

Phase I: Pre-Proposals

The pre-proposal document should follow NIH formatting and include:

  1. Title page, including the following information:
    • Name and academic rank of PI(s) and year you plan to apply for or received tenure
    • Contact information (Department email address: snow@unr.edu)
    • Title of pilot project
    • List of current grants (include title, abstract, and indicate if there is any overlap)
  2. Biographical sketch (use current NIH format) with other support page(s) (5-page max.)
  3. Pilot Project Proposal (2-page max.):
    • Describe specific aims and background and significance
    • Outline of the proposed research, including planned experiments, methods used (i.e., computational modeling, behavioral studies, fMRI), approach to data analysis where relevant
    • Can include diagrams/figures that explain the rationale or available pilot data
    • Describe the use of COBRE Core Facilities
    • Demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed research
    • Brief closing paragraph on how the project will lead to a future grant submission and target agency

Please submit all preproposal materials merged as a single PDF file (with the file name LastName_Pilot.pdf) to Jacqueline Walsh-Snow.

Phase II: Full Pilot Project Proposals (*by invitation only*)

Selected applicants will be invited to submit a full Pilot Project Proposal. Applications should be submitted as a single PDF to Jacqueline Walsh-Snow, and follow NIH SF-424 and PHS 398 guidelines and formatting to include the following:

  1. Cover letter indicating the year you plan to apply for, or date received, tenure.
  2. NIH Form Page 1 (items 1-8 excluding 4b, 5a)
  3. Biosketch for PI or co-PIs
  4. Detailed Budget of up to $40,000 in direct costs across standard budget categories:
    • Pilot project leaders must commit at least two months of effort to the project; the budget may request a maximum of one month of salary support as overload.
    • Applications must utilize the Neuroscience COBRE core facilities. Budgets should include service fees for core use where appropriate; please consult with the appropriate core director to establish budget estimates. Information on the cores is provided in 8c below.
    • Requests for funds for major equipment are discouraged and must include justification as well as a plan for maintaining the equipment within one of the COBRE research cores.
  5. Budget Justification
  6. Other Support (active and pending)
  7. Specific Aims (1 page)
  8. Research Strategy* (6 pages max):
    • The pilot project program is designed to position researchers to be competitive for extramural funding by providing support for research that can lead to preliminary data for grant applications. The Research Strategy should include a timeline, both for the research as well as the plan to submit a research grant within 1 year after the end of the COBRE pilot project support. Preliminary data is not required for pilot proposals, but the strategy should demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed work.
    • Pilot proposals that are based on applications that have previously been submitted to agencies but were not funded should provide review panel summary statements in addition to the pilot project proposal and a section discussing how the project will address the review critiques.
    • The Neuroscience COBRE provides access to a wide array of tools for neuroscience research. The strategy should include a section briefly describing how the project will make use of one or more of the COBRE research cores for 1) Neuroimaging (Director Lars Strother); 2) Cellular and Molecular Imaging and Microscopy (Director Alexander Van der Linden); 3) Virtual and Augmented Reality (Director Eelke Folmer); and 4) Computational Modeling and Analysis (Director Alireza Tavakkoli). Information about the core facilities is available on the Neuroscience COBRE website. Applicants should work with the core directors to develop the plan for core use and determine budget estimates.
  9. Literature Cited

"Just in Time" information required for proposals recommended for funding

Selected proposals must submit the following additional materials before they can be forwarded to NIH for review:

  • NIH form pages: to include Completed Form Page 1; Research and Related Other Project Information; Senior/Key Personnel; Cover Page Supplement
  • Proposals involving human or animal research must receive IRB or IACUC approval prior to award by NIH.
  • Letter of support from a project mentor. COBRE pilot projects include formal mentoring by scientific experts. Mentor support is required also for mid- or late-career applicants because the proposal should reflect a significant change of direction for the PI, for which mentoring would be helpful. The mentor can be internal or external to the University and is chosen by the applicant to help guide both the scientific aims of the project and the professional development of the investigator. Up to $2000 for external mentors or 2.5 days' overload for internal mentors, is provided to compensate mentors for their time. These funds are in addition to the pilot project award and do not need to be included in the budget. They include travel funds to allow investigators and mentors to hold in-person meetings. Applications that are selected for submission will require a letter from the mentor verifying that they are willing to serve as a mentor for the project.

Timeline

See Important Dates for deadlines. Earliest projected start date: June 1, 2025. Applications will be reviewed by the Director of the Pilot Project Program (Jacqueline Walsh-Snow) and/or by Internal and External Advisory Committees of the COBRE. Applications recommended for funding will be notified by March 3, 2025, after which JIT information will be requested. The recommended proposals will be forwarded to NIH for their review. All awards are contingent on NIH approval. Awarded budgets cannot be extended across funding years of the parent grant.

Further information

General information on the COBRE program is available at NIH. For questions regarding the scope and aims of the Neuroscience COBRE and the pilot project program or potential eligibility please contact the Pilot Project Program Director, Jacqueline Walsh-Snow, or the COBRE Director, Michael Webster.

For questions regarding the budget and format for applying for project support please contact the Center Program Manager, Leann Kumataka.