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Here is some recommend guidance about the Specific Aims:

  • Specific Aims should provide the conceptual framework, a partnership, between you and the assigned reviewer who advocates for your proposal. Rest of reviewers will be reviewing your proposal likely in “real time” focusing on Title, Summary/Abstract, Specific Aims, Significance and Innovation sections

  • The Aims becomes a template for the rest of the Research Plan

  • Include everything about proposal that is exciting and compelling but without the detail

  • Logic must be clear and compelling and must readily flow from each component

  • Recommend starting with an outline to ensure flow and eliminate unnecessary detail.

  • Have an interest-grabbing opening sentence that establishes the relevance of the proposal, helps accomplish NIH goals, is not obvious

  • Current knowledge component brings less knowledgeable reviewers up to speed on your topic and sets up the gab in knowledge or unmet need. Only key citations should be included

  • The Gap in Knowledge/Unmet need critical to the downstream flow of logic, must tie back to the current knowledge

  • The “What, Why, Who” paragraph takes reviewer from broadest to narrowest focus of application; has a credible long-term goal (big picture); has an objective that describes product of research and fills in the knowledge gap/meets the need

  • Central hypothesis links to objective, provides focus to your research, sets up the specific aims

  • Describe how the central hypothesis was formulated (preliminary research results?)

  • Rationale describes what is now possible after the research is conducted; this is the part that should excite the reviewers because it will clearly advance the field

  • Specific Aims paragraph for hypothesis-driven application describes specific aims tied to the central hypothesis; aims should be brief, informative, attention-getting “headlines”; should convey why not what is to be done; global, encompassing alternatives if hypothesis tests invalid

  • Specific Aims paragraph for needs-driven application different than hypothesis driven; should be descriptive, describe tasks to accomplish objective, what will be done

  • “Payoff Paragraph” is expected results of research; should be at least one important outcome for each aim

  • Final part of the Specific Aims section summarizes general impact of expected outcomes; segues to the Significance and Innovations subsections

Resources:

Info

Examples of Specific Aims from Hopkins Faculty

https://www.niaid.nih.gov/grants-contracts/draft-specific-aims
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6133727/
https://www.biosciencewriters.com/NIH-Grant-Applications-The-Anatomy-of-a-Specific-Aims-Page.aspx

https://hopkinscfar.org/resources/specific-aims-lightning-round/

Contacts:

cfar@jhmi.edu

Most departments have a Specific Aims boot camp or seminar. Check with your department administrator

Related Links:

Research Strategy

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