Writing the Research Plan Section: Research Design and Methods
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Research Design and Methods
- Length: +10 pages (or approximately one-half the length of the research plan).
- Organization and common subsections
- Overview of study design
- Describe the experimental design and procedures in detail and give a rationale for their use, if needed.
- In many instances, you may have struggled with a crucial design question and arrived at a satisfactory solution.
- Don’t just present your solution.
- The reviewers may wonder why you chose a particular route.
- Therefore, you should provide a rationale for your decision and discuss the rejected alternatives.
Research Design and Methods(cont’d)
- Study population
- Eligibility criteria
- Provide rationales for inclusion and exclusion criteria
- Provide rationales for control groups.
- Subject recruitment, enrollment, and retention.
- Describe sources of eligible subjects.
- Describe methods for identifying; contacting; and enrolling subjects, including obtaining informed consent.
- Study procedures: provide an overview of the following:
- Number of study visits
- Where study visits will take place
- Types of data that will be collected
- Who will collect data or perform procedures
- Where specimens will be stored/analyzed
Research Design and Methods(cont’d)
- Study measurements
- Organize and categorize them by
- Specific Aim, or
- How they will be used analytically:
- predictor variables
- outcome variables
- confounding variables
- Provide rationales for your choice if several options are available.
- Limit the amount of technical detail.
- Data quality and management
- Issues that could be included:
- Staff training
- Quality audits
- Missing data
- Data analysis
- Hypothesis testing
- Sample size calculations
- Expected findings
- Data interpretation
Research Design and Methods (cont’d)
- Potential problems and alternative approaches
- Openly recognizing any inherent holes or pitfalls in your research plan can “show maturity.”
- It is entirely appropriate to acknowledge weaknesses and to present alternative plans.
- It is a common and costly mistake to leave this kind of information out of your research plan.
- Timeline: Indicate when each specific aim will be implemented and completed.
- Emphasize feasibility of accomplishing all specific aims within timeframe and resources requested.
Abstract: Project Summary and Relevance
- Provide an abstract of the whole application (candidate, environment, and research).
- Include the candidate’s immediate and long-term career goals, research career development plan, and a description of the research project.
- Using no more than 2 or 3 sentences, describe the relevance of this research to public health.
- Be succinct and use plain language that can be understood by a general, lay audience.
Human Subjects Research
- A part of the peer review process will include careful consideration of protections from research risks for study participants, as well as the appropriate inclusion of women, minorities, and children.
- The study section will assess the adequacy of the safeguards of the rights and welfare of research participants and the appropriate inclusion of women, minorities, and children.
- Evaluation of the inclusion plans will be factored into the overall score for scientific and technical merit.
Budget Issues
- Mentored K awards provide salary support for the candidate (usually $75,000/year) plus $25,000 to $50,000/year to cover the costs of the proposed training and research.
- The amount of salary support and funds for research/training may differ by institute.
- You may not receive salary support from federally funded sources in Years 1 – 3 of the K award, although you may be a principal investigator on your own R01, R03, or R21 in Years 4 and 5.
- A detailed, itemized budget is not required by NIH, although you do have to provide a justification if you are requesting more than $25,000/year for research/training expenses.
- However, an itemized, detailed budget is required for internal review by UCSF, although it is not included in the grant application submitted to NIH .
Biosketches
- This section must include the biographical sketches of all Key Personnel and Other Significant Contributors.
- For the candidate only, the section on Publications must be divided into the following categories:
- Original research
- Non-experimental articles (e.g., literature reviews, book chapters)
- Books, pamphlets, etc.
Resources
- Describe the facilities used to conduct the research (see Examples 11 and 12).
- Indicate performance sites and describe capacities, pertinent capabilities, relative proximity, and extent of availability to the project.
- If research involving “Special Agents” will occur, the biocontainment resources available at each site should be described.
Task List
- Develop a list of all components of your grant application package, including those required by the UCSF Office of Sponsored Research (OSR).
- Indicate who is responsible for completing each component.
- Develop this list in collaboration with your RSA (research support analyst), who will help you compile the grant application for submission to the OSR and NIH.
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