Hopes for bypassing the time-wasting morass of research grant review panels are getting two big new tests in the US.
At the National Institutes of Health, some initial dataĀ are showing encouraging signs for a programmeĀ Ā ā the Maximising Investigatorsā Research Award ā that gives scientists and their labs muchĀ longerĀ andĀ largerĀ grants than normal.
Meanwhile a new non-profit effort backed by LinkedIn co-founder and billionaire Reid Hoffman, called theĀ , is avoiding review panels altogether by letting individual scientists give away millions of dollars in research funding.
Both are part of the long-running and often frustrating hunt for ways to keep the quality in the $50 billion (Ā£40 billion)-plusĀ spent each yearĀ on US university research, while cutting down theĀ massive numbers of hoursĀ that scientists spendĀ just applyingĀ for grants.
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Mira gives grants that can run toĀ at least twice theĀ average NIH award sizeĀ of about $600,000, and puts greater faith in a laboratoryās overall body of work rather than closely scrutinising each of its intended projects.
At the Hypothesis Fund, the goal is to pick up to 100 top scientists who will be given $300,000 apiece to award to colleagues with interesting research ideas, largely in human health and climate change. The just-started ventureās chief financiers include Mr Hoffman and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, and its creator and chief executive is David Sanford, a former chief of staff to Mr Hoffman and a former orthopaedics research assistant at the University of Washington.
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More at the basic science level, a major existing model for minimising bureaucratic science-evaluation panels is the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the nationās largest private biomedical research institution and funder. It currently supports more than 250 scientists at more than 60 research institutions. ItsĀ latest classĀ of 33 scientists will be given about $9 million over seven years, renewable once after a successful scientific review.
Mira, which started in 2015, has been trying something similar, although with smaller amounts and shorter time frames. Itās so far also largely limited to one NIH division, the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, that focuses heavily on basic research. But initial assessments, while limited in nature, are positive,Ā saidĀ Michael Lauer, head of external grant awards at the NIH.
One study of Mira showed that participants were winning renewal ratesĀ Ā NIH levels, suggesting positive scientific outputs, Dr Lauer said. Another internal study of Mira, he said, affirmed that the security of long-term funding is leading participants to spendĀ Ā hunting for new grant support.
So far Mira is getting about $1.3 billion a year, or about 3 per cent of the $35 billion the NIH spends each year on research conducted outside the agency, Dr Lauer said. āBut itās real money, and it's growing,ā he said.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:Ā Itās a research grant Mira-cle
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