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Congratulations to our 2024 School of Medicine Annual Research Awardees | The UCI School of Medicine Office of Research is delighted to announce the winners and honorable mentions of our fourth annual research awards to recognize research excellence and outstanding academic achievement in the School of Medicine. A sincere thank you to everyone who took the time to prepare nominations for their trainees and colleagues. Please visit our website to see the complete list of our 2024 annual research awardees. |
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2024 Core Facilities Survey | UCI School of Medicine and the UCI Chao Family Comprehensive Cancer Center are partnering on a survey regarding core research facilities in the School of Medicine. Your answers are helpful and important; all responses will be factored in to optimize our research support structure. After answering a few basic questions, you will only be asked questions pertaining to the facilities and services used by you and the researchers under your supervision. This survey is anonymous. For questions, contact Claire Brainard Draper. Please complete the survey by May 10, 2024.
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Register for an NIH Grant Writing Workshop! | The School of Medicine Office of Research is hosting a full-day, in-person workshop, “Planning and Writing Successful NIH Proposals” hosted by Dr. Jon-Michael Knapp of Luminint Consulting Group. The workshop will offer valuable insights into the grant application process, covering topics from developing a project plan to reviewing proposal feedback.
Wednesday, May 29, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Location: UCI School of Medicine, Irvine campus
Registration is limited. To participate, faculty, research staff and postdoctoral scholars must register by Wednesday, May 1, by completing this form and submitting a draft of their specific aims page.
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Announcing Revisions to the NIH Fellowship Review and Application Process | NIH announced revisions to the fellowship application and review process for grant submission deadlines on or after Jan. 25, 2025. The changes are meant to improve the chances that the most promising fellowship candidates will be consistently identified by scientific review panels. Read more. |
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Join AAAS for Future Honorary Fellow Eligibility | Researchers are encouraged to become members of AAAS (American Association for the Advancement of Science). There are many member benefits and membership in this esteemed organization has been a time-honored tradition in the scientific community.
An important benefit of membership in AAAS is to position yourself to be elected as an AAAS Honorary Fellow. AAAS Fellows are a distinguished group of scientists, engineers and innovators who have been recognized for their extraordinary achievements. In a tradition stretching back to 1874, Fellows are elected annually by the AAAS Council.
The UCI School of Medicine Awards Nominations Committee would like to nominate our researchers for consideration for election to AAAS Fellowship. One must be a continuous member of AAAS for the four-year period leading up to the year of nomination. Please make yourself eligible for this honor and become a member. |
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| We have been collecting information about new awards sent in by the School of Medicine research community and have created this space to share the news.
Alisa Mahieu and Bridget Fortin (Masri Lab, Biological Chemistry) were selected by the Society for Research on Biological Rhythms (SRBR) for an Excellence Award that will support their travel to the international SRBR conference in San Juan, Puerto Rico (May 2024). Have you or someone on your research team received research funding or an award? The School of Medicine Office of Research would like to know! Please fill out this short New Research Funding or Award Survey form. |
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| Find funding opportunities for trainees, postdocs and early career faculty, and all faculty.
For more funding opportunities and resources to help in your funding search, visit the Funding Opportunities page.
For a curated, searchable and filterable list of funding opportunities announced by NIH in their weekly NIH guide listserv, check out the School of Medicine Funding Search Tool.
Considering applying for a Limited Funding Opportunity? Typically, you submit a pre-proposal to the Office of Research via UCI Review. If the opportunity is not listed, email the Research Development Unit (RDU). |
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Postdocs & Early Career Faculty Funding Opportunities |
Pew Scholars Program in the Biomedical Sciences | UCI is among a select number of institutions invited to nominate a candidate for the Pew Scholars Program in the Biomedical Sciences. The award supports independent young investigators of outstanding promise in pursuing basic, translational, or applied biomedical research relevant to the advancement of human health. Ideas having the potential for unusually high impact are encouraged.
Candidates whose work is based on biomedical principles but also incorporates concepts and theories from more diverse fields are encouraged to apply. If your research has a cancer focus, please apply for the Pew-Stewart Scholars Program for Cancer Research internal competition run by the Cancer Center by Monday, April 29, 2024, instead of the Pew Biomedical Scholars. Pew Biomedical Scholars will receive $75,000 in annual support over four years ($300,000 in total).
UCI may nominate one candidate. Submit application and read more via InfoReady.
Deadline: Thursday, April 25, 2024
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Emerging Leader Award | The Mark Foundation for Cancer Research Emerging Leader Awards support innovative cancer research from the next generation of leaders. These grants are awarded to outstanding early-career investigators to support high-impact, high-risk projects that are distinct from their current research portfolio. The awards are $750,000 total over a three-year term.
Eligibility: Applicants must be three to eight years from the start of an independent faculty research appointment (start date must fall within 2016–21). Applicants must demonstrate multiyear independent funding that sustains the central activities of the laboratory (e.g., at least one or two grants such as NIH/R01, NSF/CAREER, or equivalently substantial multi-year awards). Read for more details.
Letter of intent deadline: Monday, April 29, 2024 by 2 p.m.
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Pew-Stewart Scholars Program for Cancer Research | The UCI Chao Family Comprehensive Cancer Center (CFCCC) is among a select number of institutions invited to nominate a candidate for the Pew-Stewart Scholars Program in Cancer Research. This grant supports assistant professors of outstanding promise in science relevant to the advancement of a cure for cancer. The award provides $300,000 in flexible support—$75,000 per year for a four-year period.
The CFCCC may nominate one candidate. Submit application and read more via InfoReady.
Deadline: Monday, April 29, 2024
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For Graduate Students & Postdocs: Microgrants for Student Policy Groups | Research!America recently launched its 2024 summer cycle of the Civic Engagement Microgrant Program, which provides funding of up to $3,000 for student- and postdoc-led civic engagement projects. We are seeking applications from groups of graduate students and post-docs for grants to support a wide range of civic engagement activities, including startup funding for new science policy groups, STEM-related events in local communities and digital media projects.
Deadline: Tuesday, April 30, 2024
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Call for Cancer Research Proposals | This is a one-year American Cancer Society Institutional Research Grant to fund several proposals up to $60,000 per award, providing pilot funds for research in both basic and clinical cancer-related problems.
Eligibility: Investigators within the first six years of their first independent faculty position and in the following series are eligible: In Line, In Residence, Adjunct, Clinical-X, Clinical and Researcher. Awardees may not hold a competitive grant from a national agency (e.g. NIH, ACS, etc.) or be a previous recipient of an ACS-IRG seed grant. U.S. citizenship, permanent residency, or visa status that permits completion of the proposal is required. Read for more details.
Deadline: Tuesday, April 30, 2024, 5 p.m. |
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NSF Research Traineeship (NRT) Program - Track 1 | The NSF Research Traineeship (NRT) program is designed to encourage the comprehensive development of graduate students as versatile STEM professionals for a range of research and research-related careers within and outside academia. UCI may submit no more than two proposals in response to this call.
Interested applicants are asked to submit an internal proposal to the Office of Research (via the UCI Review application portal). Please also alert the School of Medicine Research Development Unit (RDU) at somrd@hs.uci.edu if you intend to submit an application.
Deadline: Thursday, May 9, 2024, 11:59 p.m. |
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All Faculty Funding Opportunities |
Brain Research Foundation Scientific Innovations Award | The Brain Research Foundation has invited UCI to nominate a senior faculty member (associate professor/full professor) for the Scientific Innovations Award (SIA), which provides funding for innovative science in both basic and clinical neuroscience. This program is designed to support creative, exploratory, cutting-edge research in well-established research laboratories, under the direction of established investigators. Each total award is limited to $150,000 (direct costs) for a two-year grant period.
UCI may nominate one candidate. Submit application and read more via InfoReady.
Deadline: Wednesday, April 24, 2024
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Call for Expression of Interest: NIH/NIGMS Collaborative Program Grant for Multidisciplinary Teams | The NIH/NIGMS Collaborative Program Grant for Multidisciplinary Teams is designed to support highly integrated research teams of three to six PDs/PIs to address ambitious and challenging research questions that are important for the mission of NIGMS and are beyond the scope of one or two investigators. Collaborative program teams are expected to accomplish goals that require considerable synergy and managed team interactions. Project goals should not be achievable with a collection of individual efforts or projects.
UCI may submit two applications in response to this call per review round; therefore, interested applicants wishing to apply for the May 29, 2024, deadline are asked to submit an expression of interest via InfoReady.
Internal Submission Deadline: Thursday, April 25, 2024
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W. M. Keck Foundation Research Program Grants | The W. M. Keck Foundation asks, “What’s new science?” Concept papers should provide a compelling argument that new knowledge discovery will result from the proposed project. The foundation focuses on basic research enabling pioneering discoveries that overturn prevailing paradigms or promote new solutions to old problems. They encourage development of new technology, but also want to know what new science it will enable. Competitive LOIs will clearly articulate the specific problem you want to explore and how your approach is unique. Make a direct link between the new technology/methodology you are developing and the new questions you can ask with that technology. Budget requests may be for up to $1.5 million and may be expended over three years.
Interested applicants are asked to submit a preliminary concept paper to the Vice Chancellor for Research’s (VCR) office via InfoReady.
Deadline: Monday, May 13, 2024
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UC Multicampus Research Programs and Initiatives (MRPI) RFP | UC Research Initiatives in the UC Office of the President has issued the UC Multicampus Research Programs and Initiatives Request for Proposals, which includes opportunities for both Planning/Pilot Awards and Program Awards. The MRPI opportunity is open to UC faculty and researchers in any field of research and scholarship. Proposals require collaboration among at least three UC campuses to pursue pioneering research in thematic, multidisciplinary, or inter-disciplinary areas that enhance the UC research enterprise, strengthen UC’s position as a leading public research university, and benefit California and its people. Find additional program information on the UCOP website.
Letter of Intent deadline: Thursday, May 16, 2024, noon
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California HIV/AIDS Research Program (CHRP) Funding Opportunities | The California HIV/AIDS Research Program (CHRP) is pleased to share two requests for proposals: - Low Barrier Technology Interventions for HIV Prevention and Care
- Economic Justice Interventions to Address HIV and HIV Syndemic Factors in California.
Each of these opportunities require a letter of intent, and these will undergo competitive merit review to limit the pool of potential applicants who are invited to submit full applications. Learn more.
Applicant Webinar: Thursday, April 25, 2024, Noon. More information will be posted on the CHRP website.
Letter of Intent Deadline: Thursday, May 16, 2024
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Upcoming Seminars & Events |
Department of Biological Chemistry BC Seminar Series | Exploring adipose tissue quality in aging and exercise, by Lauren M. Sparks, PhD, associate investigator, Translational Research Institute for Metabolism and Diabetes, AdventHealth Research Institute Wednesday, April 24, 11 a.m. to noon Location: Plumwood House / Showa Denko Lecture Hall |
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Department of Microbiology & Molecular Genetics Seminar Series | Breaking the Clock: Post-translational Regulation of Chlamydial Development, by Scot Ouelette, PhD, professor, Department of Pathology, Microbiology, and Immunology, University of Nebraska Medical Center
Wednesday, April 24, 4 p.m. PTLocation: Hybrid event at Plumwood House / Showa Denko Lecture Hall, and via ZoomContact Shanti Iyer to join via Zoom. |
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Elevating Women’s Health Research — Research!America Alliance Discussion | Women continue to be understudied and underrepresented in health research despite meaningful reforms over the past three decades. Join for an alliance discussion featuring Katie Schubert, president and CEO of the Society for Women’s Health Research (SWHR), and Lori Frank, president of Women’s Health Access Matters (WHAM). Katie and Lori will discuss actions by the Biden Administration and Congress to confront these persistent challenges.
Thursday, April 25, 9 a.m.Via Zoom |
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Department of Biological Chemistry BC Special Seminar | Overcoming Microbiome-dependent Resistance to Cancer Immunotherapy, by Joon Seok Park, PhD, instructor in immunology, Department of Immunology, Harvard Medical School, Harvard University Thursday, April 25, 11 a.m. to noon Location: Plumwood House / Showa Denko Lecture Hall
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UCI Center for Aging Research in Down Syndrome (CFAR-DS) Research Seminar Series | Using mouse genetics to understand Down syndrome, by Elizabeth Fisher, PhD, professor of neurogenetics, Institute of Neurology in Queens Square, University College London. Hosted by the UCI Center for Aging Research in Down Syndrome (CFAR-DS).
Friday, April 26, 11 a.m. PT Via Zoom |
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PhD Dissertation Defense in the Department of Anatomy & Neurobiology | Novel mechanisms for encoding early-life adversity and executing its consequences on adult motivated behaviors: The role of the paraventricular thalamus, by Cassandra Kookier, PhD candidate, Dr. Tallie Z. Baram’s Lab. Reception to follow in Gillespie 1st Floor Conference Room 1133.
Monday, April 29, 2 p.m. Location: Hybrid event at Thorp Conference Center, Gross Hall, 4th Floor, or via Zoom
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Spatial Transcriptomic Data Analysis and Software Workshop | This workshop sponsored by the Genomics Research and Technology Hub (GRT Hub) will introduce data analysis workflow with both sequencing and imaging based spatial transcriptomics platforms, using 10x Visium and Xenium as examples. Please click “Register” below for more details. Attendees are encouraged to bring their own project data for analysis and discussion.
Tuesday, April 30, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Location: Sprague Hall, Room 105
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Research in Progress Seminar by UCI Chao Family Comprehensive Cancer Center and Cancer Research Institute | A New Approach to Target the Vascular Microenvironment in Tumors, by Anand Ganesan, MD, PhD, professor, Departments of Dermatology, Biological Chemistry and Surgery, UCI School of Medicine
Wednesday, May 1, noon to 1 p.m. Via Zoom |
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CHOC Research Seminar: Study Design Success & Challenges Mechanisms of Right Ventricular Failure | Speaker: Sushma Reddy, MD, associate professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Cardiology at Stanford School of Medicine, with an expertise in cardiovascular intensive care caring for pre- and post-operative and critically ill children
Wednesday, May 1, noon to 1:15 p.m. Via Zoom |
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Physiology & Biophysics Research in Progress Seminar | |
Paige Halas Graduate Student Devon Lawson, PhD, Lab Department of Physiology & Biophysics UCI School of Medicine |
Sean Tang Graduate Student Lan Huang, PhD, Lab Department of Physiology & Biophysics UCI School of Medicine | | | Unraveling the Pro-Metastatic Role of PHLDA2 in Breast Cancer, by Paige HalasDeveloping a Complex-centric XL-MS approach to Delineate the Human Interactome, by Sean TangWednesday, May 1, 4 to 5 p.m. Location: Tamkin Hall F114
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Guess Who's Coming to Dinner in 2024? How Partisan Identity Politics is Taking Over America | Speaker: Darren Shreiber, PhD, JD, senior lecturer in politics, University of Exeter. Learn more about this event hosted by the UCI Center for Neuropolitics. Friday, May 3, Noon to 1:15 p.m. PT Via Zoom
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Molecular Biology & Biochemistry Seminar | Harnessing T cell surveillance by CDK4/6 inhibition in lymphoma therapy, by Selina Chen-Kiang, PhD, professor of microbiology and immunology, Weill Cornell Medical College Friday, May 3, Noon Location: 1114 Natural Sciences 1
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Genomics, Biomedical Computing and Genetics Monthly Meeting | Translational Science at UCI Chao Family Comprehensive Cancer Center — Opportunities for Collaboration and Clinical Trials, by Farshid Dayyani, MD, PhD, professor, Division of Hematology/Oncology, Department of Medicine, UCI School of Medicine. Meeting hosted by the Genomics Research and Technology Hub (GRT Hub).
Tuesday, May 7, 10 to 11 a.m. Via Zoom |
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Clinical Research Networking Event | All faculty are invited to attend this clinical research networking event to meet peers who are conducting clinical research at UCI. Representatives from institutional committees, including ICTS, Research Development Unit, and the Human Research Protections office, will be available to answer questions about research protocols and resources. Light bites and refreshments will be provided.
Wednesday, May 8, 5 to 6:30 p.m. Location: UCI Samueli College of Health Sciences, 2nd Floor Terrace 856 Health Sciences Road, Irvine, Calif. |
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Monthly on Mondays | Faculty Development Series | Overcoming Imposter Syndrome, presented by Deepti Pandita, MD. Monthly on Mondays, presented by Nimisha Parekh, MD, and Brian J. Cummings, PhD, associate deans of faculty development, is a monthly seminar series covering a wide range of topics focused on faculty development.
Monday, May 13, 5:15 to 6:15 p.m. Location: Via Zoom
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NIH Grants Process: A Brief Walk-Through for Beginners | Are you new to working with the NIH grants process? If so, make plans to join your peers as the NIH walks through essential aspects of applying for funding. This event offers participants an opportunity to gain insights into the NIH’s organizational structure and how it funds research, finding the right fit for your research (including NIH Notices of Funding Opportunity - NOFOs), the grants process overview, peer review, NIH and applicant institution roles and responsibilities, and resources to help along the way.
Wednesday, May 15, 10 to 11:30 a.m. PT Virtual Event |
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Physiology & Biophysics Seminar Series | Career options after your PhD, by Albert Zlotnik, PhD, professor emeritus, Physiology & Biophysics, UCI School of Medicine
Wednesday, May 15, 11 a.m. to noon Location: Hybrid event at Tamkin Hall F114 and via Zoom Contact Dorota Skowronska-Krawczyk to join via Zoom. |
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CHOC Research Seminar: Discussions on improving identification of high-risk injuries associated with child physical abuse | Speaker: Gunjan Tiyyagura, MD, MHS, associate professor of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine, director of Pediatric Quality and Safety Education, Pediatrics at Yale University.
Wednesday, May 15, noon to 1:15 p.m. Via Zoom |
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Vision Research Mixer | We are excited to invite you to our Vision Research Mixer organized by the UCI Gavin Herbert Eye Institute. We hope you will join us for an opportunity to engage with other vision research colleagues from across UCI. The event will include several brief vision research talks during the first hour, followed by a reception.Wednesday, May 15, 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Location: Gross Hall, 4th Floor Conference Room
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UCI School of Biological Sciences | Department of Developmental and Cell Biology Spring 2024 Seminar Series | Revisiting the role(s) of netrin1 in the establishment of spinal cord circuitry, by Samantha Butler, PhD, professor and vice chair for Equity, Diversity and Inclusion, Department of Neurobiology, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles. Faculty who are interested in scheduling time with Dr. Butler can contact Katie Thompson-Peer.
Thursday, May 16, 11 a.m. PT Location: 4201 Natural Sciences II
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UCI Conte Center Seminar Series | The Midline Thalamus and the Control of Goal-Oriented Behaviors, by Mario Penzo, PhD, senior investigator, Unit on the Neurobiology of Affective Memory, National Institute of Mental Health
Tuesday, May 21, 4 to 5 p.m. PT Location: Hybrid event at Plumwood House lecture hall and via Zoom Passcode: 764583 |
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21st Annual EpiCenter Symposium | The 2024 EpiCenter Symposium will celebrate the 20th year of the NIH T32 program in epilepsy research. Talks will feature speakers working to solve important problems related to epilepsy in the laboratory, the clinic and the community. The keynote speaker will be Tracy Dixon-Salazar, PhD, executive director of the Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome (LGS) Foundation.
Wednesday, May 22, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Location: Sue Gross Auditorium |
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Grand Opening of UCI’s Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) Facility | Join this cocktail reception and celebration for the grand opening of UCI’s state-of-the-art Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) Facility. The GMP Facility houses seven specialized manufacturing rooms, a quality-control lab and process development services. It is uniquely poised to specialize in the production of cell and gene therapies for clinical trials in neurological diseases and cancer, significantly expanding treatment options for our patients and positioning UCI at the forefront of pioneering novel regenerative treatments into clinical practice.
Wednesday, May 22, 4 to 6 p.m. Location: Thorp Conference Center, Gross Hall — 4th Floor |
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Budgeting for Clinical Trials Workshop | Speaker: Jackie Dalke, Navigation Services Finance Manager, Clinical Trials Office, UC Davis Clinical and Translational Science Center. Workshop presented by the Western CTS Education Consortium (WCEC).
Designed with K scholars in mind, this overview will help you gain a better understanding of protocols for feasibility, determine critical parameters that may affect study outcomes, identify protocol-related items that contribute to the costs, and define the cost structure for the grant budget. The attendees will review a hypothetical National Institutes of Health (NIH) study using a Feasibility Template and convert the findings into a grant budget.
Thursday, May 23, 2 to 3:30 p.m. Via Zoom Meeting ID: 931 3390 9953 | Passcode: 884357 |
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UCI Gavin Herbert Eye Institute's 10th Annual Bench to Bedside Symposium | The Gavin Herbert Eye Institute’s 10th Annual Bench to Bedside Symposium is a FREE one-day symposium focused on exciting advances in translational research to treat eye diseases. Learn more about the poster presentation competition for a cash prize. Posters due May 10.
Saturday, June 1, 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Location: Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center, 100 Academy Way, Irvine, CA 92617
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Postdoctoral Scholar - Immuno - Virology and Vaccine Development | The Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Immunology of the UCI Gavin Herbert Eye Institute has two postdoctoral scholar openings. Applications are being sought from recent PhD, or MD/PhD graduates in the Biological/Immunological Sciences. Interdisciplinary skills and approaches in Genomics, Bioinformatics, RNA Sequencing, CyToF, FACS, Advanced Imaging, Biochemistry, Immunology and Cell Biology are strongly desired.
PI: Lbachir Benmohamed, PhD View the posting in AP Recruit. Closing date: May 15, 2024
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Project Scientist - Otolaryngology | The Department of Otolaryngology seeks a part-time or full-time project scientist with experience in CRISPR to work on inner ear therapeutics in cell culture and animals. The successful candidate should have a background in molecular genetics and will be overseeing the design and implementation of inner ear therapeutics in cell culture and eventually animal models.
PI: Hamid Djalilian, MD View the posting in AP Recruit. Closing date: May 31, 2024
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Postdoctoral Scholar-Della Martin Fellowship / Psychiatry and Human Behavior | An exciting and unique opportunity to study neuropsychiatric disorders at the molecular level and develop translational research programs in clinical populations using state-of-the art technologies including single cell RNA-seq, spatial transcriptomics, and cellular models derived from patients and controls. Successful candidate will be familiar with molecular and cellular laboratory methods and bioinformatics.
PI: William E. Bunney, MD View the posting in AP Recruit. Closing date: Sunday, June 30, 2024
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Postdoctoral Scholar in the Marazzi Lab / Biological Chemistry | The Marazzi Lab is seeking a highly motivated and talented individual to fill the position of Postdoctoral Researcher. A successful candidate will join a dynamic and innovative research team dedicated to advancing our understanding of epigenetic mechanisms and their role in human health and disease.
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Postdoctoral Scholar in Neuroscience / Conte Center | Wish to manipulate new stress-sensitive projections? Discover how early-life stress/adversity impacts brain maturation? Postdoc in amazing South California? Join the team!
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NIH Early Career Reviewer (ECR) Program | The program aims to help early career scientists become more competitive as grant applicants through first-hand experience with peer review and to enrich and diversify CSR’s pool of trained reviewers. Read more about the requirements for the Early Career Reviewer Program and enroll. |
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Did you know about these UCI-offered resources? | These three books are available to download and can be accessed via the UCI Libraries (must be on campus or using VPN): - Designing Science Presentations: A Visual Guide to Figures, Papers, Slides, Posters, and More, by Matt Carter, 2020
- The Physician Scientist’s Career Guide, by Mark J. Eisenberg, 2011
- The Essential MD-PhD Guide, by Eisenberg and Cox, 2021
UCI Apporto Virtual Computer Lab VCL (free)
- Apps available now: Stata, SPSS, Cran R, R Studio and Matlab
- Apps available soon: ArcGIS and Eviews
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School of Medicine Research Development Unit Resources |
What kind of grant support does the Research Development Unit (RDU) provide? | |
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NIH Training Grant Incentive Program | Training Grants (e.g., NIH T32) play a key role in supporting graduate students and postdoctoral fellows and increases our ability to recruit the best among them. The School of Medicine Office of Research appreciates the time commitment required to prepare and direct training grants and has the Training Grant Incentive Program for first-time submissions of new or competing renewal applications. Read the guidelines on the intake form.
Also, the School of Medicine Research Development Unit supports the preparation of training grant proposals; email somrd@uci.edu to get started. View current UCI Training Grants. View active NIH T32 funding calls. |
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Interested in submitting for an NIH multi-component grant? | If you are interested in submitting for an NIH multi-component grant, such as the P or U mechanism, please remember to reach out to Dr. Al La Spada, Associate Dean for Research Development (alaspada@uci.edu). He can guide you through the process and connect you with potential collaborators.
Also, remember that the Research Development Unit (RDU) provides project management support for these mechanisms. To request RDU services, submit this Grant Support Request intake form. There is also an incentive program for these submissions, with more details in this Incentive Program intake form. |
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Respiratory infection reminders | - Employees are encouraged to stay home when ill to help reduce the spread of infections.
- Employees, including student employees, are strongly encouraged to report cases of COVID-19 to Contact Tracing and Vaccine Navigation Services at contacttracing@uci.edu or 949-824-2300.
- Free COVID-19 antigen tests continue to be available to employees at various locations on campus.
All employee-related information can be found at Human Resources Working Well webpage. For UCI Health updates, please visit UCI Health's COVID-19 page on SharePoint.
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