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Launching Your NIDCD Research Career

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What research-training funding opportunities are available through NIDCD?

The National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD) funds research and research training in the normal and disordered processes of hearing, balance, taste, smell, voice, speech, and language. NIDCD is one of the institutes that comprise the National Institutes of Health (NIH), which is the federal government’s focal point for the support of biomedical research.

A comprehensive listing of research training and career development funding mechanisms can be found on this website.

Learn more about NIDCD’s predoctoral fellowships by watching this recording of a November 2022 webinar.

What am I eligible for?

Each of the award mechanisms for supporting research training and career development addresses a specific career stage and set of training needs. You should review the eligibility criteria and provisions of the funding mechanism in which you are interested. In addition, we strongly encourage you to contact the designated NIDCD program officer for your desired research training mechanism.  

What factors should I consider in choosing the most appropriate funding mechanism?

Your level of education and research experience    
Predoctoral level, postdoctoral level, or newly independent investigator

Citizenship status requirements    
U.S. citizenship, permanent residency, non-citizen national (living in U.S. territories) status, foreign national in the United States on a temporary visa

Whether you are a member of an underrepresented group in biomedical or behavioral research    
Including racial and ethnic minority groups, or people from disadvantaged backgrounds or who have disabilities

The kind of support you are seeking

  • Stipend or salary support
  • Tuition/fees
  • Health insurance
  • Research development support (e.g., equipment, supplies, technical support)
  • Duration of support

How will my fellowship application be reviewed?

Fellowships are peer-reviewed by a group of scientists convened by NIDCD. NIDCD staff provide second-level and programmatic review of NIDCD fellowship applications and make recommendations to NIDCD leadership for final funding decisions.

For more information on the review process for fellowship applications, see NIDCD Fellowship Frequently Asked Questions.

How long will it take to review and fund my fellowship application?

Favorably reviewed fellowship applications are often funded within four to five months of submission.

How do I apply?

Most NIH award programs now require you to apply online. Applicants should consult the appropriate funding opportunities for guidance on how to apply.

How to Apply for an NIDCD Grant and the NIDCD Fellowship Frequently Asked Questions pages provide guidance about the application and review process.

You can also consult the National Institutes of Health (NIH) or the NIH Center for Scientific Review websites.

How can I find out if NIDCD is interested in my area of research?

Potential applicants are strongly encouraged to discuss their research interests with the appropriate NIDCD scientific program officer. You might also find it helpful to consult the Research and Funding for Research sections of the NIDCD website. In addition, the NIDCD Strategic Plan describes focused areas of NIDCD research interest and opportunity.

What are the critical things I need to keep in mind as I prepare to submit my fellowship application?

  • Comply with all application instructions, such as page limits and formatting.
  • Have at least three letters of recommendation submitted on your behalf.
  • Include a training plan for the responsible conduct of research, or provide documentation if you’ve recently completed the training.
  • Comply with requirements for protection of human subjects.
  • Comply with animal welfare requirements.
  • Comply with inclusion of human subjects requirements (e.g., gender, minority status, and inclusion of children).
  • Submit your application on time.
  • Make sure your NIH eRA Commons account indicates that your electronic application has been received.

What training fellowship award mechanisms are available and what do these provide?

These awards provide a stipend, partial coverage of tuition, fees, health insurance, and trainee travel to scientific meetings. You must be a U.S. citizen, foreign national, or permanent resident to apply. There is a service payback obligation for postdoctoral researchers. You can find more detailed information about these fellowships here.

  • Ruth L. Kirschstein NRSAs for Individual Predoctoral M.D/Ph.D. and Other Dual Doctoral Degree Fellows (F30)
  • Ruth L. Kirschstein NRSAs for Individual Predoctoral Fellows (F31)
  • Ruth L. Kirschstein NRSAs for Individual Predoctoral Fellowships to Promote Diversity in  Health-Related Research (F31 Diversity Awards)
  • Ruth L. Kirschstein NRSAs for Individual Postdoctoral Fellows (F32)
  • NIDCD Research Dissertation Fellowship for Au.D. Audiologists (F32)

What are the fellowship review criteria?

The review criteria are listed in the funding opportunity notice. They include: Fellowship Applicant; Sponsors, Collaborators, and Consultants; Research Training Plan; Training Potential; and Institutional Environment and Commitment to Training. See the NIDCD Fellowship Frequently Asked Questions page for more information about these funding mechanisms.

What career development award opportunities are available for clinically trained junior faculty members?

If you are a clinically trained junior faculty member (or the equivalent in a nonacademic setting) with two or more years of prior research experience and you are on a clinician-scientist career path, you are eligible for a K08 or K23 award. Most NIH K award programs, including the K08 and K23 awards, require U.S. citizenship or permanent residency status.

The Mentored Clinical Scientist Development Award (K08) fosters the development of highly promising clinician-scientists who seek to integrate fundamental research and clinical practice into their future careers as independent investigators.

The Mentored Patient-Oriented Research Career Development Award (K23) is a sister program to the K08. Patient-oriented research is defined as research on human subjects or material of human origin, in which the investigator directly interacts with human subjects.

What makes a K08/K23 application successful?

When considering whether to apply for a mentored K award, consider the questions below:

  • Do you have prior research experience?
  • Have you been first author on published or in-press experimental research papers?
  • Have you held a small, peer-reviewed research or seed grant from a funding agency or professional society?
  • Do you have strong institutional support (a favorable research start-up package and/or protected research time)?
  • If you are submitting a revised application, have you provided strong responses to reviewer critiques?
  • Have you contacted the NIDCD program officer responsible for the K award program?

What other award mechanisms are available for beginning investigators?

The NIDCD Early Career Research (ECR) Award (R21) supports pilot studies for newly independent investigators and advanced postdoctoral fellows within seven years of completing their terminal degree (excluding years of clinical training) and as they transition to research independence. The ECR R21 award replaced the NIDCD Small Grants (R03) program on December 11, 2015.

NIH Pathways to Independence Award (K99/R00) supports highly promising postdoctoral fellows (the K99 phase) and enables them to secure an independent research position and initiate their research program (R00 phase). This award is intended to enable the awardee to be competitive for R01 grant funding early in their careers. U.S. citizens and noncitizens are eligible to apply.

How does NIH determine Early Stage Investigator (ESI) status?

What is an ESI? An ESI is a new investigator (someone who hasn’t previously competed successfully for a full-scale NIH research grant) who is within 10 years of completing his or her terminal research degree, or is within 10 years of completing medical residency or the equivalent.

ESIs are identified in the NIH eRA Commons (the place where you apply for your grant on the Office of Extramural Research’s website) based on information entered by prospective applicants about degree conferral dates and end-of-residency dates. To ensure that NIH recognizes your ESI status, you must update your eRA Commons profile to reflect the completion date of your degree or residency. There is more information about ESI and new investigators at the Office of Extramural Research’s website.

How are ESI applications reviewed? Reviews of applications from ESIs are clustered within NIH review committees, when possible, so that applicants will be judged against their peers.

How is NIDCD helping ESI applicants succeed? NIDCD employs a special second-level review process for ESI-submitted R01 applications. ESI applications are given special consideration for funding by the National Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Advisory CounciI.

Are there other assistance programs?

NIH Loan Repayment Program    
Educational loan repayment may be available for doctoral-level health professionals (broadly defined as both clinicians and nonclinicians) who are U.S. citizens or permanent residents seeking research careers involving clinical research or pediatric research. Educational debt must equal at least 20 percent of institutional base salary, and the recipient must commit at least 50 percent effort to conduct qualifying research for the two-year period of the award.

NIH Diversity Supplement Program    
NIDCD provides opportunities for people from underrepresented groups, including those from racial and ethnic minority groups, and people with qualifying disabilities or disadvantaged backgrounds, who are interested in entering or resuming research careers in the biomedical and behavioral sciences. These programs support research experiences for a range of educational and career levels—from high school students to research scientists and faculty members—by supplementing active NIDCD grants.

Who can help guide me through the process?

The Division of Scientific Programs manages the extramural research and research training portfolios of grants and contracts for NIDCD. Whatever your level of training need or career stage, a scientific program officer can be a key resource for you. The following scientific program officers are available to assist you:

Fellowships (F programs)    
Jaclyn Schurman Au.D, Ph.D.    
Individual fellowship awards (F programs)

Training and Career Development (T and K programs)    
Alberto Rivera-Rentas, Ph.D.    
Career development awards (K programs), institutional training grants (T programs), NIH Loan Repayment Program (LRP), training-related administrative supplements (diversity and re-entry)

Hearing and Balance    
Janet Cyr, Ph.D.    
Presbycusis, noise-induced hearing loss, peripheral auditory and vestibular system, temporal bone

Kelly King, Au.D., Ph.D.    
Psychoacoustics, hearing aids, cochlear implants, clinical assessment and management

Nancy L. Freeman, Ph.D.    
Cellular regeneration, development, transduction

Roger Miller, Ph.D.    
Biomedical engineering, neural prostheses, tinnitus

Amy Poremba, Ph.D.    
Central auditory and vestibular pathways

Bracie Watson, Ph.D.    
Genetics, otitis media, immune-mediated ear diseases

Taste and Smell    
Susan Sullivan, Ph.D.    
Taste and smell mechanisms and disorders

Merav Sabri, Ph.D.    
Central processing of taste and smell

Language    
Holly Storkel, Ph.D.

Voice and Speech    
Lisa Kopf, Ph.D.

Epidemiology, Statistics, and Population Sciences Section    
Howard Hoffman, M.A.

Clinical Trials    
Trinh Ly, M.D.

In addition, NIDCD conducts research within the laboratories of its Division of Intramural Research, located on the NIH campus in Bethesda, Maryland. These laboratories also offer research training opportunities. For more information on NIDCD’s research training programs, see the Training section of our website.

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