1 / 19

NSF Programs Fostering Innovation in Bioengineering

NSF Programs Fostering Innovation in Bioengineering. Semahat Demir, Ph.D. Program Director Biomedical Engineering & Research to Aid Persons with Disabilities (BME/RAPD) Division of Bioengineering and Environmental Systems National Science Foundation

basil
Download Presentation

NSF Programs Fostering Innovation in Bioengineering

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NSF Programs Fostering Innovation in Bioengineering Semahat Demir, Ph.D. Program Director Biomedical Engineering & Research to Aid Persons with Disabilities (BME/RAPD) Division of Bioengineering and Environmental Systems National Science Foundation BME- Innovation, Design and Entrepreneurship Alliance (IDEA) September 28, 2005 Baltimore, MD

  2. Outline • Vision and strategic goals of NSF • NSF Merit Review Criteria • NSF Disciplines • NSF Programs that Foster Innovation in Bioengineering • Engineering Directorate • Other Directorates • Interagency Activity and Working Groups • Interagency Funding Programs for Bioengineering • Concluding Remarks

  3. NSF Vision NSF: Where Discovery Begins Enabling the Nation’s future through discovery, learning and innovation.

  4. NSF’s Strategic Outcome Goals • People – Develop a diverse, internationally competitive and globally-engaged workforce of scientists, engineers and well-prepared citizens • Ideas – Enable discovery across frontier of science and engineering connected to learning, innovation and service to society • Tools – Provide broadly accessible, state-of-the-art information bases and shared research and education tools

  5. NSF Merit Review Criteria • Criteria include: • What is the intellectual merit and quality of the proposed activity? • What are the broader impacts of the proposed activity?

  6. What is the intellectual merit of the proposed activity? Potential Considerations: • How important is the proposed activity to advancing knowledge and understanding within its own field or across different fields? • How well qualified is the proposer (individual or team) to conduct the project? (If appropriate, the reviewer will comment on the quality of prior work.) • To what extent does the proposed activity suggest and explore creative and original concepts? • How well conceived and organized is the proposed activity? • Is there sufficient access to resources?

  7. What are the broader impacts of the proposed activity? Potential Considerations: • How well does the activity advance discovery and understanding while promoting teaching, training and learning? • How well does the activity broaden the participation of underrepresented groups (e.g., gender, ethnicity, disability, geographic, etc.)? • To what extent will it enhance the infrastructure for research and education, such as facilities, instrumentation, networks and partnerships? • Will the results be disseminated broadly to enhance scientific and technological understanding? • What may be the benefits of the proposed activity to society?

  8. Additional Criteria Specific to the solicitation • Requirements and expectations • Management plan • Dissemination plan

  9. NSF Disciplines & Structure • Biological Sciences (BIO) • Computer and Information Sciences and Engineering (CISE) • Education and Human Resources (EHR) • Engineering (ENG) • Geosciences (GEO) • Mathematical and Physical Sciences (MPS) • Social, Behavioral And Economic Sciences (SBES) • Polar Programs • Cyberinfrastructure

  10. Engineering (ENG) Directorate ENG Divisions • Bioengineering & Environmental Systems (BES) • Biomedical Eng & Research to Aid Persons with Disabilities (BME/RAPD) Program • Civil & Mechanical Systems (CMS) • Chemical and Transport Systems (CTS) • Design and Manufacturing Innovation (DMI) • Grant Opportunities For Academic Liaison with Industry (GOALI) • Electrical & Communications Systems (ECS) • Engineering Education & Centers (EEC) • Engineering Research Centers (ERC) • Partnership for Innovation Program • Industry/University Cooperative Research Centers Program Office of Industrial Innovation (OII) • Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer Program (STTR)

  11. BME/RAPD Program Fostering Innovation • CAREER, investigator-initiated, SGER projects • High risk high return projects • Funding of BME Senior Design Projects • Funding of BME- Innovation, Design and Entrepreneurship Alliance (IDEA) • BME-IDEA Meeting (PI: Paul Yock) • BME-IDEA Contest (PI: Phil Weilerstein)

  12. NSF Engineering Research Centers (ERCs) with Products in Clinical Use BioEngineering Cluster • MIT - - Bioprocess Engineering, 1985 and 1995 (graduating in 05) • Georgia Tech with Emory University School of Medicine- - Engineering of Living Tissue, 1998 • Johns Hopkins with CMU and MIT, Brigham Women’s Hospital and Johns Hopkins University Hospital - - Computer Integrated Surgical Systems, 1998 • Vanderbilt University with Harvard-MIT, Northwestern Univ. and U. of Texas-Austin - - VaNTH ERC for Bioengineering Educational Technologies,1999 • U. of Southern California with Caltech and UC-Santa Cruz –Biomimetic Microelectronic Systems, 2003 • U. of Michigan with Mich. St., & Mich. Technological Univ. - - Wireless Integrated Microsytems, 2000 • Northeastern U. with Boston U., U. of Puerto Rico-Mayaguez (UPRM), & Rensselaer - - Subsurface Sensing & Imaging Systems, 2000 • Caltech - - Neuromorphic Systems, 1995, (graduating in 05)

  13. Other Funding Opportunities for Innovation in Bioengineering at NSF • Science and Technology Centers (STCs) • Office of Integrative Activities • Integrative Graduate Education and Research Training (IGERT) Initiatives • Div Graduate Education (Directorate Education & Human Resources) • Combined Research-Curriculum Development & Educational Innovation Program (CRCD) • Div Experimental & Integrative Activities (Directorate for Computer & Information Science and Engineering) • Priority Areas • Interagency Programs

  14. Role of Interagency Efforts in Fostering Bioengineering Innovation • Interagency Activity Groups for Bioengineering • Interagency Working Groups for Bioengineering • Interagency Funding Programs for Bioengineering

  15. Interagency Activity Groups and Working Groups for Bioengineering • The DHHS Medical Technology Innovation Task Force • Image Guided Interventions (IGI) Committee • NSF Scholar in Residence at FDA Program • NIH/NCI Network for Translational Research in Optical Imaging (NTROI) • Interagency Modeling and Analysis Group (IMAG) • NIH Biomaterials and Medical Implant Science (BMIS) Committee • Multi-Agency Tissue Engineering and Sciences (MATES) Group • Working Group on the Interface of the Life Sciences and Physical Sciences • Biomass Research and Development Board

  16. INTERAGENCY PROGRAMS FOR BIOENGINEERING • Collaborative Research in Computational Neuroscience (NSF/NIH) http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2004/nsf04514/nsf04514.pdf • NIH-NSF Bioengineering and Bioinformatics Summer Institutes (BBSI) http://bbsi.eeicom.com/ • Quantitative Systems Biotechnology (2005 ended) http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2004/nsf04516/nsf04516.pdf

  17. INTERAGENCY PROGRAMS FOR BIOENGINEERING (Cont’d) • Joint DMS/BIO/NIGMS Initiative to Support Research in the Area of Mathematical Biology http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2004/nsf04572/nsf04572.htm • DDDAS: Dynamic Data Driven Applications Systemshttp://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2005/nsf05570/nsf05570.pdf • Interagency Opportunities in Multi-Scale Modeling in Biomedical, Biological, and Behavioral Systems (NSF, NIH, NASA, DOE) http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2004/nsf04607/nsf04607.pdf

  18. Concluding Remarks • Innovation in Bioengineering • Novel ideas • “Integrative” approaches; complex/open-ended problems • Innovation leading to products and clinical use • Better health care delivery; economic growth • Integration of research and education for innovation • All innovations come from education • “Real world experiences”; teaching innovation and entrepreneurship • NSF Programs Fostering Innovation in Bioengineering • BME/RAPD, SGER, ERC, SBIR, STTR, GOALI, STC, IGERT, CRCD • Future: Collaborations • Interagency Activity and Working Groups for Bioengineering • Interagency Funding Programs

  19. Thanks for the invitation! www.nsf.gov

More Related