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Find similar grantsNSF Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Biology is sponsored by NSF. NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Biology is a grant from the National Science Foundation that funds postdoctoral fellowships training early-career scientists to apply AI and biological research methods, advancing biotechnology innovation and preparing future leaders at t…
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Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Biology (PRFB) | NSF - U.S. National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Biology (PRFB) Important information for proposers and award recipients All proposals must be submitted in accordance with the requirements specified in the funding opportunity and in the Proposal & Award Policies & Procedures Guide (PAPPG) and its supplements .
All NSF grants and cooperative agreements are subject to the applicable set of NSF award terms and conditions . NSF has updated its research security policies for NSF funded projects. Supports postdoctoral fellowships that train early-career scientists to apply AI to biological research, advancing biotechnology innovation while preparing future leaders at the intersection of AI and biology.
Supports postdoctoral fellowships that train early-career scientists to apply AI to biological research, advancing biotechnology innovation while preparing future leaders at the intersection of AI and biology. The integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Biological Research has the potential to pave the way for breakthroughs in biotechnology and bio-system design that will create innovations, new industries, and jobs.
To capitalize on this promise, the Directorate for Biological Sciences (BIO) will make awards for Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Biology (PRFB) to recent doctoral degree recipients, for proposals with a research and training focus at the Intersection of Artificial Intelligence and Biological Sciences to Strengthen and Safeguard Biotechnology Innovations.
Applying AI to highly complex biological systems will reveal unknown mechanisms in the natural world that hold promise for technological developments. Candidates with AI and/or biology experience will develop deep expertise in both by proposing additional training in both areas. These combinations of current expertise and new cross-training will produce scientists who work seamlessly at the intersection of AI and biology.
The fellows are expected to become field leaders who use AI capabilities to extrapolate from biological data to technological advances.
Proposers are encouraged to consider how to leverage the nation’s diversity of existing biological data, and biological infrastructure, such as Biofoundries, Programmable Cloud Labs, Manufacturing USA Institutes, and NEON, to accelerate discovery, innovation and the biotechnology that improves human lives, promotes the U.S. economy, and benefits the nation.
Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Biology June 17, 2026 - NSF BIO Virtual Office Hour: Updates from the NSF Directorate for Biological… Additional program resources How to Apply for Fellowship Applicants Sponsoring Scientist Statement Instructions Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Biology (PRFB) Administrative Guide (NSF 25-032) PRFB Reference Letter Author Submission Guide Awards made through this program Browse projects funded by this program Map of recent awards made through this program Directorate for Biological Sciences (BIO) Division of Biological Infrastructure (BIO/DBI) This program provides educational opportunities for Post-Doctoral fellows.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: U. S. citizens, nationals, or permanent residents who have completed their doctoral degree. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates $60,000 annual stipend plus $12,000 cost of education allowance Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
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Agricultural Technologies (AG) - NSF SBIR/STTR is sponsored by National Science Foundation (NSF). The Agricultural Technologies topic supports innovations enabling farm production ecosystems that support the proper utilization of natural resources. Such technologies may encompass systems-level and multidisciplinary solutions to enable complex agricultural practices that support increased biodiversity balanced with yield production. Sub-topics include food waste mitigation, resilient supply & distribution, and other agricultural technologies.
NSF ADVANCE program is sponsored by National Science Foundation (NSF). The NSF ADVANCE program aims to broaden the implementation of evidence-based systemic change strategies that promote equity for STEM faculty in academic workplaces and the academic profession. The program provides grants to enhance systemic factors that support equity and inclusion and to mitigate systemic factors that create inequities in the academic profession and workplaces.
EPSCoR Research Infrastructure Improvement Program: Focused EPSCoR Collaborations Program (FEC) is sponsored by U.S. National Science Foundation. The FEC program builds interjurisdictional collaborative teams of EPSCoR investigators in STEM focus areas. Projects are investigator-driven and must include researchers from at least two EPSCoR eligible jurisdictions with complementary expertise to address challenges. The program aims to drive discovery and build sustainable STEM capacity. Tennessee is an EPSCoR-eligible jurisdiction.
Engineering of Biomedical Systems (EBMS) Program is sponsored by U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF). The EBMS program supports fundamental and transformative research at the interface of engineering and biomedical sciences to solve biomedical problems. Projects should focus on high-impact, transformative methods and technologies, including the development of validated models (living or computational) of normal and pathological tissues and organ systems, and advanced biomanufacturing of three-dimensional tissues and organs.
On June 1, 2026, DARPA and the National Science Foundation announced AI Forge — a jointly governed forum that will fund, guide, and manage university-led research on AI interpretability, AI control, and adversarial robustness. The RFI on sam.gov closes June 22. The forum itself will be administered by a new nonprofit launching in summer 2026. The structure is what matters: this is not a one-off solicitation, it is a multi-year venue for university-government-industry research that operates outside the normal merit-review timelines of either agency. What university research teams should be doing in the seventeen-day window between the announcement and the RFI deadline — and what the forum model means for federal AI funding through FY 2028.
Read articleNSF's TechAccess: AI-Ready America program (NSF 26-508) opens with a Round 1 Letter of Intent due June 16 and a budget that scales to $224 million across up to 56 awards — one State or Territory Coordination Hub per state, DC, and U.S. territory. Each hub is $1M/year for three years with a possible fourth, and is tasked with five concrete functions including a public AI resource inventory, a state AI readiness plan, deployment assistance, workforce coordination, and sector convening. The first round funds 10 hubs, the second 20, and the third the remainder — a structure that makes early submission decisively more valuable than late submission. Strategy for state agencies, university systems, EDAs, and nonprofit consortia considering a bid.
Read articleNSF raised its RAPID grant ceiling to $300,000 and EAGER to $400,000 alongside the December 2025 merit review overhaul. With external review now reduced to a two-reviewer minimum and panel discussions optional, the program-officer-driven RAPID and EAGER mechanisms have become more attractive than they have been in two decades. Why investigators with stalled or terminated standard proposals should be writing one-page RAPID concepts this month, and what the new authority structure means for the relationship between PIs and program officers.
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