Bold,
interdisciplinary research grants span science, engineering and education
NSF today announced the first set of new
awards that will be given out under INSPIRE, which, when all are distributed
under this fiscal year, will total about $30.4 million. Eleven awards were
released today, and the total number of awards is expected to reach 40 over the
next few weeks. The maximum size for an INSPIRE award this year is $1 million.
INSPIRE, which stands for Integrated NSF
Support Promoting Interdisciplinary Research and Education, was established to
address some of the most complicated and pressing scientific problems that lie
at the intersections of traditional disciplines.
"INSPIRE is a great example of the
vital role NSF plays in supporting highly innovative research and education
projects at the intersections of traditional disciplines in science and
engineering," said NSF Director Subra Suresh. "Through INSPIRE and other
NSF programs, I encourage our nation's scientists and engineers to submit to
NSF their most innovative ideas for interdisciplinary research."
In FY12, NSF established INSPIRE to fund
interdisciplinary, potentially transformative research. Once fully implemented,
INSPIRE will complement other NSF efforts with a suite of new, highly
innovative NSF-wide activities and funding opportunities. INSPIRE awards are
co-funded between the Office of Integrative Activities and other NSF offices
and directorates. INSPIRE aims to widen the pool of prospective discoveries by
supporting proposals that may be viewed as falling outside of other NSF
programs and funding mechanisms.
The awards made under INSPIRE include
research on resorbable electronics, modeling and optimization of DNA
manufacturing processes, statistical mechanics of natural climate variability,
wireless sensor networks in experimental biology research, and scalable toolkit
for transformative astrophysics research.
In FY13, INSPIRE will expand to include
larger "mid-scale" research awards up to $3.0 million. This new
mid-scale opportunity will provide researchers with a novel funding mechanism
to consider research questions that might be beyond the scope of standard NSF
programs due to funding limitations.
-NSF-
Media Contacts
Dana Topousis, NSF (703) 292-7750
dtopousi@nsf.gov
Program Contacts
Thomas F. Russell, NSF (703) 292-4863
trussell@nsf.gov
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