Find Funding Opportunities

 COVID-19 Funding Notices | Approved Initiative Concepts | Research Opportunity Announcements

All NINDS-related notices of funding opportunities (NOFOs), request for applications (RFAs), program announcements (PAs), and other NIH Guide announcements are listed. Search the Closed Opportunities tab to find expired opportunities. Search the Notices tab to find all Notices.

Learn more about award types and program directors and managers.

NINDS has a number of open positions for researchers and clinicians to contribute to exciting neuroscience programs - APPLY NOW!

For more focused results add quotes to indicate parameters. Example format: "search term".

Expiration Date: Friday, April 11, 2025 NOFO Number: NOT-OD-22-136 Release Date: Tuesday, May 31, 2022 Notice Type: Notice of Special Interest
The NIH INvestigation of Co-occurring conditions across the Lifespan to Understand Down syndromE (INCLUDE) Project seeks to improve health and quality-of-life for individuals with Down syndrome (DS). This Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) announces NIH support for development of Academic Research Enhancement Award (AREA) and Research Enhancement Award Program (REAP) applications for Health Professional Schools and Graduate Schools to support small scale basic and translational research grants that meet programmatic objectives of the INCLUDE project at institutions that do not receive substantial funding from the NIH, with an emphasis on providing biomedical research experiences primarily for undergraduate and/or graduate students and enhancing the research environment at applicant institutions. Eligible institutions must award NIH-relevant baccalaureate or advanced degrees in health professions and have received less than $6 million per year of NIH support (total costs) in 4 of the last 7 fiscal years. In this FOA, a college is a stand-alone entity and not a component of a university system. The goal of this NOSI is also to build a pathway of meritorious undergraduate and graduate students engaged in Down syndrome research. A REAP application may include other investigators, such as collaborators or consultants, or other trainees such as high school students, post baccalaureate participants, postdoctoral fellows, or clinical fellows. However, involvement of such individuals does not fulfill the goal to expose undergraduate and/or graduate students in eligible environments to research.
Expiration Date: Thursday, May 1, 2025 NOFO Number: NOT-OD-22-123 Release Date: Thursday, May 26, 2022 Notice Type: Notice of Special Interest
The NIH INvestigation of Co-occurring conditions across the Lifespan to Understand Down syndromE (INCLUDE) Project seeks to improve health and quality-of-life for individuals with Down syndrome (DS). This Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) announces NIH support for research project grant (R01) applications that are focused on Down syndrome and that meet programmatic objectives for the INCLUDE Project.
Expiration Date: Saturday, September 14, 2024 NOFO Number: RFA-NS-22-039 Release Date: Wednesday, May 25, 2022 Notice Type: RFA
This FOA will support integrated, interdisciplinary research teams from prior BRAIN technology and/or integrated approaches teams, and/or new projects from the research community that focus on examining circuit functions related to behavior, using advanced and innovative technologies. The goal will be to support programs with a team science approach that can realize meaningful outcomes within 5-plus years. Awards will be made for 5 years, with a possibility of one competing renewal. Applications should address overarching principles of circuit function in the context of specific neural systems underlying sensation, perception, emotion, motivation, cognition, decision-making, motor control, communication, or homeostasis. Applications should incorporate theory-/model-driven experimental design and should offer predictive models as deliverables. Applications should seek to understand circuits of the central nervous system by systematically controlling stimuli and/or behavior while actively recording and/or manipulating relevant dynamic patterns of neural activity and by measuring the resulting behaviors and/or perceptions. Applications are expected to employ approaches guided by specified theoretical constructs, and are encouraged to employ quantitative, mechanistic models where appropriate. Applications will be required to manage their data and analysis methods in a prototype framework that will be developed and used in the proposed U19 project and exchanged with other U19 awardees for further refinement and development. Model systems, including the possibility of multiple species ranging from invertebrates to humans, can be employed and should be appropriately justified. Budgets should be commensurate with multi-component teams of research expertise including neurobiologists, statisticians, physicists, mathematicians, engineers, computer scientists, and data scientists, as appropriate - that seek to cross boundaries of interdisciplinary collaboration.
Expiration Date: Saturday, September 14, 2024 NOFO Number: RFA-NS-22-040 Release Date: Wednesday, May 25, 2022 Notice Type: RFA
This FOA will support integrated, interdisciplinary research teams that focus on examining dynamic circuit functions related to behavior, using advanced and innovative technologies. The FOA will support programs with a necessarily-synergistic, team science approach. Awards will be made for 5 years, with a possibility of one competing renewal. Applications should incorporate overarching principles of circuit function in the context of specific neural systems underlying sensation, perception, emotion, motivation, cognition, decision-making, motor control, communication, or homeostasis. Applications should incorporate theory-/model-driven experimental design and should offer predictive models as deliverables. Applications should seek to understand circuits of the central nervous system by systematically controlling stimuli and/or behavior while actively recording and/or manipulating relevant dynamic patterns of neural activity and by measuring the resulting behaviors and/or perceptions. Applications are expected to employ approaches guided by specified theoretical constructs, and are encouraged to employ quantitative, mechanistic models where appropriate. Applications will be required to manage their data and analysis methods in a framework that will be developed and used in the proposed U19 project and exchanged with other BRAIN U19 awardees for further refinement and development. Model systems, including the possibility of multiple species ranging from invertebrates to humans, can be employed and should be appropriately justified. Programs should employ multi-component teams of research expertise including neurobiologists, statisticians, physicists, mathematicians, engineers, computer scientists, and data scientists, as appropriate - that seek to cross boundaries of interdisciplinary collaboration. Applicants proposing to include human subjects with invasive neural recording must apply to the companion FOA, RFA-NS-XX-XXX.
Expiration Date: Sunday, September 22, 2024 NOFO Number: RFA-NS-22-041 Release Date: Tuesday, May 24, 2022 Notice Type: RFA
This FOA will support integrated, interdisciplinary research teams that focus on examining dynamic circuit functions related to behavior, using advanced and innovative technologies. The FOA will support programs with a necessarily-synergistic, team science approach. Awards will be made for 5 years, with a possibility of one competing renewal. Applications should focus on overarching principles of circuit function in the context of specific neural systems underlying sensation, perception, emotion, motivation, cognition, decision-making, motor control, communication, or homeostasis. Applications should aim to understand these circuits of the central nervous system by systematically controlling stimuli and/or behavior while actively recording and/or manipulating relevant dynamic patterns of neural activity and by measuring the resulting behaviors and/or perceptions. Applications are expected to employ approaches and experimental design guided by specified theoretical constructs, are encouraged to employ quantitative, mechanistic and predictive models where appropriate. Model systems, including the possibility of multiple species ranging from invertebrates to humans, can be employed and should be appropriately justified. Programs should employ multi-component teams of research expertise including neurobiologists, statisticians, physicists, mathematicians, engineers, computer scientists, and data scientists, as appropriate - that seek to cross boundaries of interdisciplinary collaboration. Applications will be required to manage their data and analysis methods in a framework that will be developed and used in the proposed U19 project and exchanged with other BRAIN U19 awardees for further refinement and development.
Expiration Date: Wednesday, November 13, 2024 NOFO Number: NOT-OD-22-124 Release Date: Tuesday, May 24, 2022 Notice Type: Notice of Special Interest
The NIH INvestigation of Co-occurring conditions across the Lifespan to Understand Down syndromE (INCLUDE) Project seeks to improve health and quality-of-life for individuals with Down syndrome (DS). This Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) announces NIH support for the professional development of early career scientists aiming to establish a career in DS-related research. By providing these scientists with training, resources, and mentorship, the NIH intends to support the career development of investigators in DS and other intellectual disabilities who will lead future research to improve the understanding of the biology of DS and support development of new treatments for health conditions experienced by those with DS.
Expiration Date: Wednesday, December 10, 2025 NOFO Number: NOT-NS-23-003 Release Date: Friday, May 20, 2022 Notice Type: Notice of Special Interest
The purpose of this Notice is to inform potential applicants about an area of special interest to NINDS in research to develop or substantially modify existing cutting-edge tools that will advance prenatal and/or pediatric hydrocephalus research. Applications should aim to transform the field of prenatal and/or pediatric hydrocephalus research by generating tools including animal and cell models, novel methods and innovative technologies that will be widely used throughout the neuroscience community to understand disease mechanisms and/or developing therapeutics.
Expiration Date: Wednesday, December 10, 2025 NOFO Number: NOT-NS-23-004 Release Date: Friday, May 20, 2022 Notice Type: Notice of Special Interest
The purpose of this Notice is to inform potential applicants about an area of special interest to NINDS in hypothesis-driven research projects that focus on deciphering the molecular, cellular and developmental mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of prenatal and/or pediatric hydrocephalus and to examine new approaches for treatment.
Expiration Date: Thursday, February 20, 2025 NOFO Number: PAR-22-184 Release Date: Friday, May 13, 2022 Notice Type: PAR
Reissue PAR-19-220.
Expiration Date: Thursday, May 8, 2025 NOFO Number: NOT-OD-22-107 Release Date: Thursday, May 12, 2022 Notice Type: Notice of Special Interest
The Office of Disease Prevention (ODP) and participating National Institutes of Health (NIH) Institutes, Centers, and Offices (ICs) are issuing this Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) to solicit applications proposing to strengthen the evidence base for preventive screening services where the evidence is lacking, of poor quality, conflicting, or the balance of benefits and harms cannot be determined.
Export to:
A maximum of 400 records can be exported.