OSP Weekly 06/15/2022
----- Division of Research -----
OSP Roles and Responsibilities Matrix
What are your roles and responsibilities for a sponsored project?
Are you responsible? Your department? Your Dean? OSP? The VPR?

Accessible and Now Online
The Research and Other Scholarly Activities Roles and Responsibilities Matrix details who the Primary responsible party and support responsibilities are to complete all of the task(s) throughout the lifecycle of a sponsored project.
NSF FastLane Discontinued
Beginning in January 2023, all new proposals must be prepared and submitted in Research.gov or Grants.gov. FastLane will no longer be a preparation and submission optionThe National Science Foundation strongly urges proposers to prepare and submit all eligible proposals in Research.gov now, to support a smooth transition from FastLane proposal preparation and submission to Research.gov in January 2023.
 
New Research.gov Proposal Preparation Functionality Available May 2nd
 
New Postdoctoral Fellowship Proposal Type
  • The Postdoctoral Fellowship proposal type is available in Research.gov for proposals submitted in response to postdoctoral fellowship solicitations that do not contain reference letter requirements. The postdoctoral fellowship solicitations will be updated to include information about proposal preparation and submission in Research.gov.
  • To initiate a postdoctoral fellowship proposal in Research.gov, the proposer must first have the Postdoctoral Scholar/Principal Investigator (PI) role, which is different from the PI role.
  • Refer to the Postdoctoral Fellowship Proposals topic Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) on the Research.gov About Proposal Preparation and Submission page for instructions to add the Postdoctoral Scholar/PI role. Additional guidance is available in the Add a New Role – Postdoctoral Fellowship Principal Investigator section of the Account Management Guide on the Research.gov About Account Management page.
  • Postdoctoral fellowship program solicitations will only display in Research.gov and be available for selection for proposers preparing a proposal as a Postdoctoral Scholar/PI.
 
New Research.gov Proposal Features
  • Expanded Where to Apply Options: Proposers now have to the ability to choose additional Directorate/Division/Program options (i.e., secondary units of consideration) to direct proposals to NSF. Refer to the Managing Where to Apply topic FAQs on the Research.gov About Proposal Preparation and Submission page for additional information.
  • Project Data Form: The Project Data Form is now available in Research.gov and must be included in proposals for selected funding opportunities in the Directorate for Education and Human Resources (EHR)/Division of Undergraduate Education (DUE). See the Project Data Form topic FAQs on the Research.gov About Proposal Preparation and Submission page for details.
  • Separate Uploads of Multiple Supplementary Documents: Proposers can now upload multiple PDF documents in the Other Supplementary Documents proposal section and will no longer need to combine documents into a single PDF prior to uploading.
 
NSF Public Access Repository (NSF-PAR) Enhancements Effective May 2nd
  • PIs and co-PIs can now remove research datasets from NSF-PAR without assistance from the NSF Help Desk by disassociating the NSF award(s) from the dataset. Disassociating all NSF awards from a dataset removes the dataset from the NSF-PAR publicly facing search.
  • Deposit of dataset information in NSF-PAR remains optional, and there are no changes at this time to NSF’s Public Access policy or project reporting requirements.
NIH Climate Change and Health Seminar
Please join us on Wednesday, June 22, 2022, for the next event in the NIH wide Climate Change and Health Webinar Series. This webinar will feature Sir Andy Haines, Professor of Environmental Change and Public Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

  • Wednesday, June 22, 2022 10-11am ET, (GMT-4)
  • Register Here
  • Welcome by Roger Glass, M.D., Ph.D., FIC Director

Climate change threatens health through a range of pathways including the effects of heat and extreme events, increased air pollution, changes in infectious disease transmission, undernutrition, increasing poverty and population displacement, but there are still important gaps in our understanding of the impacts. The development and implementation of effective adaptation and mitigation strategies are essential to reduce the risks to health. The presentation will give an overview of the research challenges and opportunities for generating evidence for effective action.
Althea Sheets, Research, Scholarly, and Creative Activity Development Manager, Office of Sponsored Programs, [email protected], 702-895-1880