Grants of up to $5,000 to support new mass spectrometry projects and methodologies in emerging research areas, early phase investigations, and pilot studies.
The Wu Tsai Human Performance Alliance invites proposals on athletic performance, injury prevention, and injury recovery to discover the biological principles that govern optimum performance, from the molecular level to the whole body.
The Stanford SPARK program supports the discovery and development of novel therapeutics and diagnostics that address unmet medical needs by offering funding, education and project-specific mentorship.
The IMA, CDCM and CCT, seek to accelerate the development of promising and innovative early-stage translational stem cell and gene therapies that fill unmet clinical needs.
We invite Stanford researchers across all disciplines to submit interdisciplinary research proposals on learning differences and/or the future of special education for projects funded up to $80,000 for a one year project.
SCI offers Innovation Awards to support collaborative projects focused on acceleration of basic, translational, clinical and population-based cancer research, and projects focused on cancer care, such as pancreatic, breast and gynecologic cancers.
The Center for Artificial Intelligence in Medicine and Imaging (AIMI) and the Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI) jointly seek proposals that support new ideas that reimagine artificial intelligence in healthcare.
The goal of the Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence research program is to foster interdisciplinary AI research that aims to improve the human condition. We seek proposals for up to $75K that support new ambitious ideas.
IMA is accepting proposals for assay development projects to create and optimize miniaturized assays in 384-well microplate format for use in high-throughput, small-molecule screens.
ChEM-H seeks to support research projects driven by junior investigators and aimed at testing molecular hypotheses in human subjects. Submissions must include an MD or MD/PhD investigator and a junior investigator.
The Innovative Medicines Accelerator (IMA) aims to accelerate the translation of scientific discoveries at into new therapeutics that impact human health. This RFP supports treatments for spinal muscular atrophy and other neuromuscular diseases.
The KL2 Mentored Career Development Program (KL2 Scholars Program) at Stanford University is a two-year research program funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Stanford Clinical Translational Science Award (CTSA) Program.
Addressing the impact of structural racism and social injustice as key drivers in health disparities that affect maternal and child health are critical to advancing research.
The Innovative Medicines Accelerator (IMA) aims to accelerate the prototyping of innovative medicines, and to enable hypothesis-driven studies on human subjects. This RFP seeks to leverage Stanford Clinical and Translational Research Unit.
Internal funding opportunity for Stanford Medicine faculty in all lines within seven years of first faculty appoinment. Open to women pursuing advancement or to men or women who support the advancement of women in medicine and/or medical research.
The Seed Grants fund innovative, interdisciplinary research projects proposed by at least two independent Stanford faculty, who use different methodologies/approaches and/or work in different disciplines, in the neurosciences broadly defined.
This grant is to attract and increase junior faculty members, including highly qualified physicians, physician-scientists, population-based or basic/translational scientists, and to maximize their potential to be leaders in academic medicine
Grants of up to $7,500 to support new mass spectrometry projects and methodologies in emerging research areas, early phase investigations, and pilot studies.
The Spectrum SPADA Pilot Program funds projects with a goal of diagnosing and/or predicting the onset, course, worsening, or complications of disease, and prolonging health.