San Diego, June 26, 2012 -- The California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2) has announced the second round of its Calit2 Strategic Research Opportunities (CSRO) grant program. Faculty and research scientists at the University of California, San Diego are eligible to submit proposals for funding and in-kind support, with all proposals due no later than July 27, 2012. Winning proposals will be announced in August for one-year projects that will begin effective October 1, 2012.
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Calit2 says it will be particularly receptive to proposals in the health and culture arenas, and ones which address both an application thrust and an enabling technology. “Wireless health is a good example of a sector where technology development promises to yield important benefits for society at large,” said Ramesh Rao, director of the UC San Diego division of Calit2. “We are looking for the faculty to propose high-impact, near-term projects that also achieve high marks in the technical review process.”
The 3-to-5-page proposals must be submitted electronically through the online CSRO Proposal Upload manager. Most winning proposals will be awarded a combination of cash and in-kind support, e.g., including access to Calit2 technical personnel, equipment, lab space, and services. Faculty interested in submitting a proposal are urged to read the Call for Proposals, background information on Calit2 research, its Strategic Vision, and other aspects of the CSRO program, including frequently asked questions.
Total funding for the new round is expected to exceed the $700,000 in support awarded to a total of 19 winning projects in the inaugural May 2010 round of CSRO grants. The majority of awards will be in the $20,000 to $60,000 range.
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“We appreciate the rigorous process that Calit2 uses to select the best of the proposals submitted by UC San Diego faculty,” said Rajesh Gupta, chair of the Computer Science and Engineering department. “Our new Moxie Center’s mission is to promote innovation and entrepreneurship by motivating, educating and mentoring undergraduate engineering students via an incubator program. We see the CSROs as a further opportunity to invest in undergraduate research on projects that could be domiciled in the Moxie Center workspaces in the CSE or Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering buildings.”
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“We are reaching out to the broad community of researchers, many of whom may not have been on campus in the formative years of the institute,” said CSRO program chair Curt Schurgers, a Calit2 functional manager and former professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering department of the Jacobs School. “Over one-quarter of the faculty recipients of CSRO awards in 2010 were newcomers to Calit2. The CSRO program has become an important way to engage with faculty who share our vision and research agenda.”
In its Strategic Vision, the institute targets four major application thrusts: energy, the environment, health and culture. The plan also calls for continued investment in enabling technologies. While the current Call for Proposals emphasizes health, culture and enabling technologies, investigators are also welcome to submit proposals centered on energy or the environment, particularly if they are related to work in wireless, cyberinfrastructure or other enabling technologies.
Calit2 has invested heavily in personnel, equipment and services, and the CSRO program allows the institute to allocate a portion of those resources to new projects that are liable to produce proofs of concept, early prototypes, research findings and early-stage successes that may position a CSRO grantee to go after much larger federal grants in future.
All proposals will be judged on five criteria: scientific and technical merits; relevance to Calit2’s strategic thrusts and enabling technologies; cost realism against the proposed effort; use of existing Calit2 infrastructure or the project’s potential to contribute to that infrastructure; and the likelihood of achieving pre-identified measures of success.
Proposed projects under the program are not required to be multidisciplinary, but projects spanning different technical areas, departments, divisions or schools at UC San Diego will receive preference.
Media Contacts
Doug Ramsey, 858-822-5825, dramsey@ucsd.edu
Related Links
Calit2 Strategic Research Opportunities Program
CSRO Call for Proposals
Calit2 Research
Calit2 Strategic Vision