The first step is to submit a two-page letter of intent describing how the McKnight award would permit new approaches and accomplishments toward the development of translational research.
The letter should address the following questions:
- What clinical problem are you addressing?
- What are your specific aims?
- How will the knowledge and experience you have gained in basic research be applied to improving the understanding of a brain disorder or disea
- How are you fostering an inclusive and equitable lab environment?
- How are you addressing an environmental contribution to brain disorders? (if applicable)
The letter should clearly describe how the proposed research will uncover mechanisms of brain injury or diseases and how it will translate to diagnosis, prevention, treatment, or cure.
The letter of intent should include the email addresses of the principal investigators and a title for the project.
LOI Details
The application process is completely online. Click here to access the Stage One LOI form. One investigator (the primary contact for the proposal) will be required to set up a user name and password (please retain your username and password as you will need it throughout the process); then complete an online face sheet and upload a two-page project description (images must be within the two-page project description); please limit references to two pages (in addition to project description). For the 2-page project description, please use this formatting: single-space in 12-point font using one-inch margins. Please upload documents as a single PDF in this order: A) project description and references, and B) NIH Biosketches for each PI.
Finalists will be invited via email to submit a full proposal and participate in a virtual interview. Competition is very intense; applicants are welcome to apply more than once.
If you do not receive email confirmation of receipt of your LOI within a week of submission, please contact Joel Krogstad.
Selection Process
A review committee will evaluate the letters and will invite a few candidates to submit complete proposals.
Following review of the proposals, the committee will recommend up to four awards to the Board of Directors of the Endowment Fund. The board will make the final decision.
The Endowment Fund will fund up to four awards, each providing $100,000 per year for three years. Awards will be announced in July 2025 and begin in August 2025.
Eligibility
A candidate for a McKnight Neurobiology of Brain Disorders Award must work as an independent investigator at a not-for-profit research institution in the United States, and must hold a faculty position at the rank of Assistant Professor or higher. Those holding other titles such as Research Professor, Adjunct Professor, Professor Research Track, Visiting Professor or Instructor are not eligible. If the host institution does not use professorial titles, a letter from a senior institutional official (e.g., Dean or Director of Research) must confirm that the applicant has his/her own dedicated institutional resources, laboratory space, and/or facilities.
A candidate may submit separate applications to both Scholar Awards and Neurobiology of Brain Disorders Awards during the same cycle. If the applicant receives a Scholar Award and becomes a finalist for NBD, their application to NBD would be rescinded as they cannot hold two awards simultaneously.
There is no limit to the number of times that a candidate may apply for a Neurobiology of Brain Disorders Award.
Previous McKnight Awardees are eligible to apply so long as they have not already been awarded the same kind of award. Example: a Scholar Awardee can later apply for an NBD Award once they have completed their Scholar Award funding.
There is no limit for how many applications we can receive from the same institution in the same funding round, and while we strive for institutional diversity there have been cases when more than one applicant from the same institution has been awarded in the same grant period.