Opportunity

Simpler Grants.gov #NOT-AA-25-009

Forecasted Funding Opportunity for NIAAA INIA Consortia Administrative Resource Core (U24)

Buyer

National Institutes of Health

Posted

May 06, 2025

Respond By

May 01, 2026

Identifier

NOT-AA-25-009

NAICS

541715

This forecasted opportunity from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) supports the renewal of the NIAAA Integrative Neuroscience Initiative on Alcoholism (INIA) Consortia Administrative Resource Core. - Government Buyer: - National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) - Scope and Focus: - Funding for two collaborative, multisite research consortia via cooperative agreements - Research focus: brain-body homeostatic dysregulation leading to excessive alcohol consumption and Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) - Emphasis on hypothesis-driven research, cross-site collaboration, and use of advanced neuroscience tools and technologies - Standardization of neurofunctional measures and focus on rigor and reproducibility across consortia - Products/Services Requested: - No specific commercial products, OEMs, or vendors identified; this is a research grant opportunity - Includes administrative and resource cores, as well as individual research projects - Unique/Notable Requirements: - Cross-site collaboration among consortia - Adaptation and application of advanced neuroscience technologies - Standardization and reproducibility in research methods - Eligibility: - Open to state/local governments, tribal organizations, educational institutions, nonprofits, and businesses - Estimated total funding: $1,200,000 for two awards

Description

The National Institutes of Health plans to renew the NIAAA Integrative Neuroscience Initiative on Alcoholism (INIA) to support two collaborative research consortia studying brain-body homeostatic dysregulation related to excessive alcohol drinking and Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD). The initiative encourages hypothesis-centered research on alcohol interactions and focuses on trajectories from initial exposure to pathological drinking to identify markers and mechanisms for prevention and intervention. It promotes innovation by adapting advanced tools and technologies to examine brain structure and function at multiple scales and emphasizes rigor and reproducibility through standardization and replication across consortia. The renewal will support two multisite consortia through cooperative agreements, including administrative and resource cores and individual research projects, with applications not currently solicited to allow time for collaboration development.

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