Funded Awards

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) BRAIN Initiative funds a wide-variety of research: toolmakers, trainees, individual labs testing new hypotheses, and large, team-based efforts aiming to catalyze neuroscience inquiry forward. Explore NIH BRAIN Initiative funded awards listed below. Click on the project title to learn more about it within NIH RePORTER.

To see more NIH-funded awards and associated publications, please visit the NIH RePORTER

Title
Investigator(s)
Institution
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunity #
TitleComputational foundations of active visual sensing
Investigator
Mackenzie Weygandt Mathis, Cristopher M Niell, Zachary Samuel Pitkow, Andreas Tolias
Institute
baylor college of medicine
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Abstract Vision is an active process: we move our head and eyes to explore the sensory world.
TitleComputational Tools for assessing mechanisms and functional relevance of divisive normalization
Investigator
Ruben Coen-Cagli
Institute
albert einstein college of medicine
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Project Summary Divisive normalization (DN) is a well-established theory of how interactions between neurons in a circuit modulate the activity of individual neurons.
TitleCortical circuits for the integration of parallel short-latency auditory pathways
Investigator
Hiroyuki Kato, Paul B Manis
Institute
univ of north carolina chapel hill
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
PROJECT SUMMARY How our brain achieves coherent perception by integrating information from parallel sensory pathways distributed across space and time remains a central question in neuroscience.
TitleCRCNS: Circuit mechanisms of priors and learning during decision making
Investigator
Guangyu Yang
Institute
massachusetts institute of technology
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

When learning a new task, both rats and humans exhibit suboptimal behaviors plagued with superstitious ticks and idiosyncratic biases.

TitleCRCNS: Deconstructing dynamics of motor cortex in freely moving behavior
Investigator
Paul Nuyujukian
Institute
stanford university
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

What operations are performed by the mammalian central nervous systems to coordinate and conduct voluntary movement? Motor systems neuroscience seeks to understand these neural mechanisms.

TitleCRCNS: Dynamics of thalamocortical networks during sensory discrimination
Investigator
Mark Allan Reimers
Institute
michigan state university
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
TitleCRCNS: Evidence-based modeling of neuromodulatory action on network properties
Investigator
Yangyang Wang
Institute
university of iowa
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
TitleCRCNS: Heterogeneous effects of cognition on perception: unique leverage on circuit mechanisms
Investigator
Marlene Rochelle Cohen, Brent D. Doiron
Institute
university of chicago
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
TitleCRCNS: Multifocal causal mapping of brain networks supporting human cognition
Investigator
Aapo Nummenmaa
Institute
massachusetts general hospital
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Neuroimaging methods such as functional MRI and magneto- / electroencephalography (MEG/EEG) cannot directly reveal causal relationships between regional brain activity and behavior.

TitleCRCNS: Neural Representations of Time Across Scales in Natural and Artificial Networks
Investigator
Marc W Howard
Institute
boston university (charles river campus)
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
TitleCRCNS: Understanding Single-Neuron Computation Using Nonlinear Model Optimization
Investigator
Fabrizio Gabbiani, Matthias Heinkenschloss
Institute
baylor college of medicine
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Motivation and Objectives Why are ion channels localized in subcellular dendritic compartments and is there a tight coupling of the observed localization with neuron function?

TitleDataJoint SciOps: A Managed Service for Neuroscience Data Workflows
Investigator
Dimitri Yatsenko
Institute
vathes inc.
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Project summary This SBIR proposal aims to address current challenges in data-driven neuroscience by implementing DataJoint SciOps: a commercial service to help research labs implement computational workflows for data-intensive science experiments.
TitleDeciphering the genomic mechanisms underlying the physiology of human brain stimulation
Investigator
Genevieve Konopka, Bradley C Lega
Institute
ut southwestern medical center
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
The underlying mechanisms of brain stimulation in humans are poorly understood, especially at the level of gene expression.
TitleDeep Analysis of Brain Chemistry at Enhanced Spatial and Temporal Resolution using Microscale Sampling and Analysis
Investigator
Robert T Kennedy
Institute
university of michigan at ann arbor
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
The objective of this project is to develop new bioanalytical methods for exploring brain chemistry dynamics in vivo. Monitoring the concentration dynamics of neurochemicals in vivo is vital for studying brain function, diseases, and treatments.
TitleDeep and fast imaging using adaptive excitation sources
Investigator
Chris Xu
Institute
cornell university
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Abstract Optical recordings of activity are critical to probe neural systems because they provide high-resolution, non-invasive measurements, ranging from single neurons to entire populations in intact nervous systems, and are readily combined with genetic methods to provide cell type-specific reco
TitleDefining the circuit, synaptic, and molecular mechanisms linking intracellular Ca2+ release to learning using subcellularly-targeted manipulations and imaging techniques in dendrites in vivo
Investigator
Justin O'hare
Institute
columbia university health sciences
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Project Summary/Abstract Candidate Goals and Mission Relevance: The applicant’s broad, long-term objective is to investigate how high- (circuit/behavioral) and low- (subcellular/molecular) level organizational principles of the brain cooperate to drive learning.
TitleDevelopment and Testing of LUCID: A Therapeutic Device for Brain Injury Following Infant Cardiac Arrest
Investigator
Wiley Thomas Waddell, Maik Huettemann, Thomas Hudson Sanderson
Institute
mitovation, inc.
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Cardiac arrest in infants is a medical emergency requiring rapid resuscitation to restore circulation. However, resuscitation often results in significant brain injury, caused by ischemia/reperfusion injury.

TitleDevelopment and Validation of a Genetically Encoded Method to Trace and Manipulate Neuronal Circuits in Zebrafish
Investigator
Carlos Lois, David Aaron Prober
Institute
california institute of technology
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
PROJECT SUMMARY Identifying how neurons are connected to each other in the brain is an important and necessary step towards understanding how brain activity gives rise to behavior, and how it is perturbed by disease.
TitleDevelopment of a Miniaturized Wearable Ultrasonic Beam-forming Device for Localized Targeting of Brain Regions in Freely-moving Experimental Subjects
Investigator
Kevin A Snook
Institute
actuated medical, inc.
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
This Phase I SBIR will further develop, validate, and initiate commercialization of the miniature ultrasound beamforming array (MUBA) system for transcranial focused ultrasound (tFUS).
TitleDevelopment of a sample preparation protocol for brain ultrastructural analysis, immunolabeling, and neuronal tracing by light microscopy
Investigator
Ons M'saad
Institute
panluminate inc.
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Abstract The brain is the most complex organ in the human body. Understanding its neural connections and molecular anatomy requires imaging technology that is capable of mapping the 3D nanoscale distribution of specific proteins in the context of brain ultrastructure.
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