OppNet, NIH’s Basic
Behavioral and Social Science Opportunity Network,
announces its second FY2013 RFA:
Application due date
December 17, 2012
Purpose
This RFA encourages grant applications for infrastructure support
to develop, strengthen, and evaluate transdisciplinary approaches and methods
for basic behavioral and/or social research on the relationships among cultural
practices/beliefs, health, and wellbeing. This includes an appreciation for
more comprehensive understandings of the relationships regarding cultural
attitudes, beliefs, practices, and processes, on outcomes relevant to human
health and wellbeing. Model animal research teams are welcome to
apply. OppNet intends to commit $1,425,000 in FY2013 for approximately
5-7 awards. Future year amounts will depend
on annual appropriations.
Background
Culture usually is defined in terms of beliefs and practices that
are shared within a population, which itself may share attributes such as
ethnicity, race, language, gender, sexuality, specific physical impairments, or
geographic space. These beliefs and practices reflect common values,
socialization processes that are intrinsic to the population of interest, and
their other shared attributes. The specific processes by which culture
encompasses health-related beliefs and practices may be obscured by surrogate
variables (e.g., language, national origin, race/ethnicity). There is a need
for research that improves the conceptualization and measurement of culture and
does this in the context of health and social and behavioral processes that
influence health.
The R24 mechanism is designed to build research infrastructure and
incorporates research projects as part of this effort. Projects should
bring together transdisciplinary teams of investigators who collectively can
provide new insights into relationships between aspects of culture and health.
The team should choose a small project that demonstrates the power of their
approach to deliver new insights that lead to improved health outcomes or
facilitates the effectiveness of health research. This project may provide
formative or pilot data which can be used to inform future, larger
transdisciplinary health research.
OppNet welcomes research teams that include expertise
complementary to basic social and behavioral sciences, e.g., arts, ethics,
humanities, law. Given OppNet's express mission to advance the basic
behavioral and social sciences, applications must have a majority emphasis in
basic behavioral and social sciences. For feedback on specific topics,
please consult the program staff listed in Agency
Contacts.
About OppNet
OppNet is a trans-NIH initiative that funds activities to build
the collective body of knowledge about the nature of behavior and social
systems, and that deepen our understanding of basic mechanisms of behavioral
and social processes. All 24 NIH Institutes and Centers that fund research and
five Program Offices within the NIH Office of the Director (ICOs) co-fund and
co-manage OppNet. All OppNet initiatives invite investigators to propose
innovative research that will advance a targeted domain of basic social and
behavioral sciences and produce knowledge and/or tools of potential relevance
to multiple domains of health- and lifecourse-related research.
OppNet uses the NIH definition of basic behavioral and social
science research (b-BSSR) (http://obssr.od.nih.gov/about_obssr/BSSR_CC/BSSR_definition/definition.aspx)
to determine application responsiveness. Consequently, OppNet strongly
encourages prospective investigators to consult this definition, OppNet’s
answers to frequently asked questions about b-BSSR (http://oppnet.nih.gov/about-faqs.asp),
OppNet’s Coordinating
Committee members, and the Agency
Contacts section of this FOA for individuals with expertise in the research
subject matter and the OppNet initiative.
Applicants should understand that the National Library of Medicine (NLM), which
made this FOA available to the public, is not necessarily the NIH IC that
ultimately will manage a funded OppNet project. Instead, OppNet assigns funding
and project management of meritorious applications to one of 24 NIH ICs whose
scientific mission most closely corresponds to each research project. For
more information about OppNet, its NIH members, its grant portfolio, and all
its current funding opportunities, visit http://oppnet.nih.gov.
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