Office of Vice President for Research:
Resources for Researchers

Key Links

 

Funding Opportunities

 

Weekly Synposis of Funding Opportunities

 

Collaborative Research Funding Program in Medical Technologies

UT Dallas, UT Arlington, Texas Instruments and the Texas Health Research & Education Institute (THRE) are jointly providing funds for collaborative research focused on medical technologies that address critical healthcare needs. The key elements of the program are:

  • Proposals must have at least one researcher from UT Dallas and one from UT Arlington to be eligible. Clinical collaborators from the THRE are encouraged.
  • The maximum award amount will be $100,000 for one year.
  • The deadline for submission of proposals is 5:00 p.m. on November 6, 2009.

Additional details about the program including application forms and funding priorities can be found here. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact the individuals listed on website or Rafael Martín.

 

 

Stimulus Package Opportunities

Information about grants available as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, also known as the stimulus package is here.

 

News and Events

 

2010 NSF CAREER Proposal Writing Workshop

Sponsored by NSF, the 2010 NSF CAREER Proposal Writing Workshop will be held on March 25-26, 2010, at Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA. The application deadline for the workshop is January 1, 2010

This workshop is to provide future CAREER proposal submitters with proposal review experience and interactions with NSF program directors and recent NSF CAREER awardees. Major activities of the workshop include presentations by NSF program directors on the basics of proposal writing, presentations by recent CAREER awardees on their experiences and tips, mock panel reviews of actual recent CAREER proposals, and panel reviews of project summaries of the attendees' own CAREER proposals.

 

Nanotech Presents Measurement Challenges

New nanoscale materials and devices are required to replace the silicon transistor that's at the heart of today's semiconductors, but to build these new devices, researchers will have to be able to measure the thickness of layers consisting of only a few atoms, according to a UT Dallas researcher. read more

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Updated: October 19, 2009