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If you've gathered additional data between the time you submitted and the review, you may be allowed to send it. See the NIH Best Practice Guidelines for details. Contact your scientific review officer to find out if this is possible; he or she decides whether to accept any additional information. Be aware that reviewers are under no obligation to review late materials, and they could reflect either positively or negatively on you.
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Your application's most significant test is initial peer review.
Your peers -- successful scientists in your field and related ones -- use the information in your application to assess the scientific merit of the science you've proposed and your ability to get the work done.
After evaluating your proposal, reviewers give it a numerical value indicating their judgment of its scientific merit. That critical number is the most important factor in determining your application's success.
The next section details NIH initial peer review. (For a broad overview, read Perspective on Peer Review in our New Investigator Guide to NIH Funding.)
Find more information online:
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NIH peer reviewers are scientists, mostly from academia, who come to NIH three times a year for several days to review applications.
Our Advice: Know Who's Who in Peer Review These are the key people involved in initial peer review:
Depending on grant type, initial peer review meetings take place in either CSR or an institute. The process is essentially equivalent in both venues in terms of policy, review criteria, committee composition, conduct of the meetings, and size of the group -- about 20 members.
CSR Review
NIAID Review
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Your scientific review officer does an initial check of your application to make sure the key parts are there.
If you're responding to a request for applications, NIAID program staff check to ensure it is responsive to the request for applications.
Before sending your application to reviewers, SROs look at the application more thoroughly to make sure it's complete and may contact you if anything is missing. If this happens, send in the information quickly so reviewers receive it well before the review.
SROs assign primary, secondary, and tertiary reviewers.
Four to six weeks before the meeting. SROs send each committee member a copy of all applications to be reviewed. For both paper and electronic applications, CSR and NIAID follow roughly the following procedure:
For example: for a review of 100 applications, a reviewer may receive 95 on CD (five not sent because of conflicts) and paper copies of 15 of the 95 to which he or she is assigned.
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NIH uses a process called streamlining so reviewers can focus on applications that have a chance of being funded.
Review committees don't review any application the group unanimously feels is roughly in the bottom half of applications being reviewed at the meeting (that percentage varies by grant type as well as by study section). Since no institute has a 50 percentile payline, these applications are simply not competitive.
Here is how streamlining works:
We describe this in more detail below.
Find more information online:
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If you already have your review results, was your application streamlined?
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CSR review committees gather three times a year for a one- to three-day meeting.
Initial peer review meetings take place four to five months after the NIH receipt date for applications other than AIDS, one to two months later for AIDS applications.
At the meeting, the scientific review officers make sure the group adheres to policy and procedure. The group's chairperson, a committee member, facilitates the discussions. To experience a peer review meeting, watch CSR's video of a mock study section Video on Peer Review at NIH.
Our Advice: Know What Happens During Peer Review Though they do not participate, institute program staff may attend the meeting and can become a source of additional insight into the discussion.
After the SRO opens the meeting, generally the primary reviewer presents your application to the group.
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Generally, only assigned reviewers will read your application before the review. Other reviewers mostly read just your Abstract, Background and Significance, and Specific Aims.
Reviewers receive dozens of lengthy applications for each meeting, totaling thousands of pieces of paper to read in a few weeks -- and they also have full-time jobs! In reality, they couldn't possibly read all of them in depth.
The primary reviewer must be able to readily read, understand, and explain your proposal, the reason you make a strong case for your research in the application. In Part 4. Target Your Audience and Part 5. Research Plan, we told you how to turn your assigned reviewers into your advocates.
Keep in mind that twenty people will score your application even though probably only two have carefully read it. This is the reason you write and organize your Specific Aims for both audiences (we discussed this topic in Plan and Organize Effectively, and Part 5. Research Plan).
If you're sending in an application you revised based on reviewers' comments from the last review, the reviewers will evaluate your response. For details, see How to Revise and Resubmit.
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Reflecting the reviewers' judgment of the technical and scientific merit of your application, the priority score is an essential review outcome.
For more information on funding decisions, see How NIAID Determines Which Applications to Fund.
Role of Review Criteria
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When assessing the scientific and technical merit of an application, all NIH review committees use the same initial peer review criteria -- see the Review Criteria SOP.
If you're responding to a request for applications, check the RFA for special review criteria.
Though peer reviewers don't score applications strictly by review criteria, the criteria are gauges for assessing merit and feasibility.
It's important to understand how review criteria relate to your score:
Your reviewers will consider other items besides the review criteria.
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Three types of applications are unscored -- they do not receive a full review, priority score, or summary statement.
It's important to keep in mind that unscored applications can still be high quality and possibly fundable. To learn more about this now, read below starting at If Your Application Scores Above the Payline or Is Unscored.
1. Streamlined review. Applications that peer reviewers unanimously judge to be roughly in the bottom half of applications being reviewed at the meeting (though the percentage varies by grant type as well as by study section) get a streamlined review.
Streamlined applications are not discussed at the meeting and do not receive a priority score. Instead, principal investigators receive the primary and secondary reviewers' critiques as a summary statement.
For more information, see Noncompetitive Applications Get a Streamlined Review above and If Your Application Scores Above the Payline or Is Unscored below.
2. Not recommended for further consideration. NRFC is used for applications that lack significant and substantial scientific merit or have serious hazards or ethical issues. Such applications do not warrant a review and are generally not eligible for funding.
3. Deferred. A scientific review group can postpone the review of an application if unable to determine its scientific merit because information is missing. The group may contact the applicant right away or request another review at a later review date.
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Do you already know how your application fared in review?
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Was your application unscored or NRFC?
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Is your application foreign?
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NIH awards grants to foreign applicants if either the expertise or resources are not available here -- for example, access to a unique study population.
Find more information online:
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Bias is extremely rare.
For details on this subject, see the Conflict of Interest in Peer Review SOP.
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After peer review, applications receive a priority score and summary statement (except those that are streamlined).
NIH releases summary statements to you and your program officer roughly six to eight weeks after the review meeting, earlier for new investigators. You can retrieve this information from the Commons:
At that time, it's a good idea to call your program officer if you haven't done so already.
Ask whether your application is likely to be funded or whether he or she can give you more feedback from the review if funding is not on the horizon.
Go to NIAID R01 Application to Award Timeline.
Our Advice: If Problems Are Fixable, Start Revising Quickly If your application missed the payline or is unscored and its faults are fixable, we advise you to assess whether the problems are fixable, and if they are, start revising as soon as you can.
You may not have much time left to revise after you get the summary statement.
Before you can decide whether to revise, you need to determine if the problems are fixable -- read Part 11b. Not Funded, Reapply.
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Are you thinking of appealing the review?
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Scientific review officers prepare summary statements for applications considered to be competitive for funding -- i.e., those given a full review and a priority score by the review committee.
Our advice. After you read the summary statement, contact your NIAID program officer. Ask whether your application
is likely to be funded and whether he or she can give you more
feedback
from the review if funding is not on the horizon. ![]() |
Should you revise?
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Are you thinking of appealing the review?
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Just-in-time means you send information to NIAID when we request it. To see how we ask you for this information, go to our Sample Just-in-Time Email and How and when will I find out if I need to send information just-in-time? in the Just-in-Time questions and answers.
We request this information if your application scored roughly within the top 20 percent. Though you may not get funded, you should prepare your just-in-time information anyway. See If I receive a JIT notification, does that mean I'll get an award? in the Just-in-Time questions and answers.
Other support information is always just-in-time. We also request any of the following documentation relevant to your research that you did not include in your application:
End-of-year warning. We may skip over your application if it comes up for funding at the very end of the fiscal year and your just-in-time submission is not ready. While we're waiting for you, we may fund other applications, and you could lose your chance of funding if we run out of money or time.
When it's due. Your institution's business official should submit other support and human subjects training information within two weeks of receiving a just-in-time notice. You don't need to sign this information because you have a signature assurance on file with your institution.
Since institutional review board and institutional animal care and use committee certifications may take more than two weeks, your business official may submit these approvals at the earliest date possible. Whether you send the certifications with your application or just-in-time, they should be sent together, not separately.
NIH prefers that your institution submit the documentation through the Commons. If you wish, you may fax it to your grants management specialist.
Read the next sections for details on the bullets above.
Find more information online:
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Will you conduct human subjects or animal research?
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If you're conducting human subjects research, your institution's business official needs to submit the following documents.
Wait until you get a just-in-time request if you didn't send this with your application. NIH prefers that your institution submit the documentation through the Commons. If you wish, you may fax it to your grants management specialist.
Human Subjects Assurance
Your institution needs to file a human subjects assurance with the Office for Human Research Protections (OHRP).
You can Search the OHRP Database, or ask your institution to see if it already has an approved assurance. Make sure the new assurance number is on file if it has changed since you submitted your application.
If you have a subaward agreement, check that the subaward organization has a human subjects assurance and IRB approval.
IRB Certification
You also need to obtain and send certification of your institutional review board's approval of your Research Plan. Unlike the assurance, this certification needs to be re-approved every year of your project.
Training Certification
If you haven't submitted it with your application, send us your certification of human subjects education letter stating that each person identified under key personnel has completed an educational program in the protection of human subjects.
Once your grant is under way, you'll need to send the training letter only for new key personnel. Use our Sample Letter to Document Training in the Protection of Human Subjects, and get detailed information on NIH's FAQ.
Find more information online:
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If you're working with research animals, your institution's business official needs to submit the following documents.
If you didn't send this with your application, wait until you get a just-in-time request.
Your institution needs to file an animal welfare assurance with the Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare (OLAW).
If you have a subaward agreement, make sure that the subaward organization has an animal welfare assurance and IACUC approval. If the subaward organization has an assurance but your institution doesn't, get an inter-institutional assurance. See Is Your Institution Assured by OLAW? for details.
Your institution can submit the documentation through the Commons or email the signed assurance to olawdoa@mail.nih.gov as a PDF.
You will provide certification of your institutional animal care and use committee approval and get re-approved at least every three years. For more information about getting certification of IACUC approval, go to Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.
NIH prefers that your institution submit the certification date through the Commons. If you wish, you may fax the documentation of approval to your grants management specialist.
Find more information online:
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Just-in-time, you will send NIAID a list of other support -- existing support you have and support you may gain from the current application.
If you have no other support, we will need a letter stating that fact from your institution's business office.
Our Advice: Get
Other
Support Information Ready Well Before We Make the Award
Your other support information shows the following:
Find more information online:
If you have consortium or contractual agreements, send through the Commons just-in-time.
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| The next part of the NIH Grant Cycle: Application to Renewal is Part 9. Second-Level Review. |
Help us improve our outreach to you by emailing deaweb@niaid.nih.gov.
| Department of Health and Human Services | National Institutes of Health | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases | July 8, 2008 |
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