The Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute is requesting Letters of Intent for its third round of Big Ideas in Neuroscience. Successful Big Ideas projects promote health, new technologies and basic discoveries.
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 colon, lung, pancreatic, prostate, breast and gynecologic cancers.
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 Stanford Innovative Medicines Accelerator (IMA) is accepting proposals for projects that address two major challenges in drug development: identification of drug candidates and optimization towards clinical gene and cell therapy products.
Novartis is awarding $100,000 to $300,000 for 1 year for translational research that can contribute to their early-stage pipeline and ultimately benefit patients. Please fill in the Pre-Proposal Submission Word Template before August 1, 2024.
Stanford HAI seeks proposals that support new, ambitious, and speculative ideas in AI with the objective of getting initial results. We expect to award approximately 25 grants, up to $75,000 each with the possibility of an additional $10,000 for public policy analysis.
Proposals can request any amount up to $10,000. The grant proposal form includes a section for the staff to share the budget indicating what expenses will be support
The Stanford Innovative Medicines Accelerator (IMA) is accepting proposals for human subjects research that fosters the clinical development of new or existing drugs, vaccines, and companion biomarkers that directly enable drug development.
The King Center recognizes that conducting research in low- and middle-income countries is increasingly complex and that in extraordinary cases, faculty may have emergency funding needs for ongoing projects.
The King Center on Global Development invites proposals from Stanford faculty for capacity-building and policy-engagement activities that support academics, government officials, or other policymakers in low- and middle-income countries.