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Skip to content Skip to search Skip to footer Neurology Open Menu Back Close Menu Search for: Search Close Search Home AboutAbout Mission Message from the Department Head Leadership Faculty Careers Our Culture Diversity, Equity, Inclusion & Belonging Department Portals FacultyFaculty Emeritus Faculty Voluntary Clinical & Adjunct Faculty Sections Patient CarePatient Care Find a doctor Our Approach to Care Areas of Care Locations ResearchResearch Research Centers Labs Clinical Trials EducationEducation Adult Residency Pediatric Residency Fellowships Postdoctoral Research Opportunities Medical Student Education Living in St. Louis ConferencesConferences Grand Rounds Neuroscience Glossary News Events Giving Open Search Bold Pioneer Award Recognizing early career investigators pushing the boundaries in neurological disease, neuroscience or fundamental aging research. The WashU Medicine Bold Pioneer Award is a $10,000 funding opportunity established in 2022 by Randy Bateman, MD, the Charles F. and Joanne Knight Distinguished Professor of Neurology at Washington University School of Medicine. We believe that rewarding daring approaches to research early in investigators’ careers will catalyze the mindset required to accelerate research breakthroughs and advance clinical impact. We are grateful to our donor for supporting and believing in this work. 2024 WashU Medicine Bold Pioneer Award $10,000 personal financial award, recognition ceremony and medallion Applications due: Sept. 1, 2024 Purpose The goal of this award is to recognize and encourage early career investigators who have demonstrated bold, pioneering research that is high-risk by virtue of being fundamentally different from standard approaches. The intent is to encourage scientific research investigators to challenge status quo approaches by developing fundamentally different methods, approaches, or experiments that increase the odds of discovering unexpected findings. The bold pioneering experimental approach is by definition high-risk because of many unknowns and lack of precedent. Applications should demonstrate that an approach was successfully completed, regardless of whether there is evidence of long-term validation or benefits. Validation of results, translation into later stage findings, positive or successful outcomes from the findings are not part of this evaluation. This award recognizes the daring investigator, regardless of if the findings pan out to long-term benefit. Eligibility Applicants are not limited to Washington University, but must be at an academic, public or non-profit institution and junior as defined as less than the equivalent of Associate Professor status or tenure (or the WashU equivalent at another institution). Both self-applicants and nominations are accepted. Application & review process Applications will open annually in the spring with the intent of awarding the winner in the summer. The call for applicants will be sent to leaders in Neurology, Neuroscience, and Aging research; including departmental chairs, Institute and Center directors, NIH leadership and others as appropriate. Applicants and nominators will submit applications via email. Applications will be reviewed by a panel with expertise in identifying bold pioneers. The award may or may not be awarded each year. If no awardee is recognized, funds will accumulate to be awarded to future awardees. WashU Medicine Bold Pioneer Award$10,000 funding opportunity presented by the Department of Neurology Recognizing early career investigators pushing the boundaries in neurological disease, neuroscience or fundamental aging research. Download Flyer (PDF) Application instructions 2024 WashU Medicine Bold Pioneer AwardApplications due: Sept. 1, 2024 Both self-applicants and nominations are accepted. Send completed application to [email protected]. Provide a full CV and the following in PDF format to fit on one page, in 11-point Arial font, with 0.5-inch margins: One sentence regarding the discovery and impact Contact information of the applicant Contact information of Nominator 1 (someone who can confirm that the work highlighted in this application was completed by the applicant) Contact information of Nominator 2 (someone who can confirm that the work highlighted in this application was completed by the applicant) Paragraph further describing the discovery and how the approach demonstrates that the applicant is bold and pioneering (no more than 200 words) Describe the specific actions and outcomes taken that were pioneering and describe how these approaches were fundamentally different from standard approaches. Evidence should be provided about how the approach was not in use (or previously used) by others, the rationale for doing the study in the novel way, the increased risk for failure, the challenges and obstacles faced, the actions taken to ensure successful implementation of the pioneering approach, the resilience of the applicant, and the new findings/information that have changed the potential status quo view. One to two manuscripts supporting the bold research and one sentence describing the role of the applicant in each. Questions? Please reach out to us if you have any questions. Email: [email protected] Department of NeurologyWashington University School of MedicineMSC 8111-29-9000660 S. Euclid Ave.St. Louis, MO 63110Contact Us Instagram Twitter Contact Us Events Intranet Subscribe to newsletter Privacy Policy Disclaimer ©2024 Washington University in St. Louis

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