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There is now a CONTENT FREEZE for Mercury while we switch to a new platform. It began on Friday, March 10 at 6pm and will end on Wednesday, March 15 at noon. No new content can be created during this time, but all material in the system as of the beginning of the freeze will be migrated to the new platform, including users and groups. Functionally the new site is identical to the old one. webteam@gatech.edu
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Atlanta, GA | Posted: October 14, 2021
On August 5, the Office of the Executive Vice President for Research at Georgia Tech awarded a first round of grants meant to assist in the formation and advancement of cross-disciplinary research teams.
The grants come in response to shifting trends in national research and funding priorities. Major funding agencies like the National Science Foundation (NSF) are increasing their support for large-scale, team-based projects, according to Georgia Tech faculty members Robert Butera and Devesh Ranjan. Successful proposals for these projects often rely on integrating expertise from across disparate areas, including engineering, science, liberal arts, design, and business.
“A lot of cutting-edge science requires a team approach,” said Butera, who is also vice president for research development and operations.
Academic research faculty have historically worked within a narrower scope, according to Butera. In particular, newer research programs have tended to be focused within one single discipline, with no more than one or two different faculty members involved.
Far larger projects are becoming more common. One example is a $21.9 million DARPA-funded effort led by Phil Santangelo, professor of biomedical engineering, which seeks to develop gene-based therapeutics for flu and other viruses, including Covid-19. That project directly involves vaccine manufacturers and a broad range of other collaborators.
“That’s a really huge research project,” said Butera. “That's a level of project management complexity and proposal development that faculty are [traditionally] not prepared for.”
Supporting these projects and the new seed grant program is the Office of Research Development, formed in April 2020 and led by Rebecca Terns. The office particularly focuses on supporting proposals for creating large research centers and institutes, like the NSF Engineering Research Center for Cell Manufacturing Technologies, which is led by Georgia Tech faculty and was funded at a $20 million dollar level in September 2017.
Two different types of awards are being offered by the program. One aims to support forming new collaborations, while another focuses on advancing collaborations that already exist. In the recent funding round, nine different proposals for “Forming New Teams” were awarded an average of $38,000 each, and eight different proposals for “Moving Teams Forward” were awarded an average of $83,000 each.
Butera and Terns note that the seed grants will not exclude research efforts of small and medium funding scale. Rather, they are intended to support efforts whenever greater collaboration than usual is required.
“Larger teams are not a requirement,” said Terns. “You want the right size team for the job.”
The seed grant program also aims to support projects that go beyond pure research. For example, many team-based projects require efforts related to education, community engagement, and workforce development.
One group of researchers that won a grant for Moving Teams Forward proposed the development of a radical new approach to semiconductor manufacturing, based on 3-D printing. If that approach wins out, it will require an education plan for an entirely new manufacturing workforce, which the researchers plan to develop using funding from their award.
Another research group that won a grant for Forming New Teams proposed to assemble a team of economists, transportation system engineers, environmental engineers, biostatisticians, and epidemiologists. They plan to use data from the Covid-19 pandemic to find direct correlations between changes in air quality due to reduced pollution and infant health outcomes. The coordination of experts from multiple disciplines will be needed to pin down complex demographic dependencies, according to the researchers’ proposal.
Two more rounds of funding will be offered, with proposal submission deadlines of October 15, 2021 and March 19, 2022. Approximately $750,000 will be available for each round, according to program staff.
“Large teams are how great scientific advances get made,” said Butera.
Seed Grant Awards for Forming New Teams
Seed Grant Awards for Moving Teams Forward