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Forecasted

Establishing a Research Network to Guide Foundational Research on Human Consciousness

Federal funding opportunity RFA-AT-27-002 from National Institutes of Health.

View forecast on Grants.gov →Forecasted — not yet open

Posted
April 28, 2026
Closes
See announcement
Program funding
$600,000
Expected awards
1
Cost sharing
No
Instrument
Cooperative Agreement
Assistance listing
93.476, 93.213
Category
Health

Program funding history

Awards made under Assistance Listing 93.213 across FY2024–FY2026, from public federal spending records.

FY2024 obligated
$118.3M
FY2025 obligated
$115.4M
FY2026 (to date) obligated
$38.7M
Awards in window
683

Top recipients: University of California, San Diego, Yale Univ, The General Hospital Corporation, Regents of the University of California, San Francisco, the, The Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital Corporation

Source: USAspending.gov · refreshed July 2026

Synopsis

This Funding Opportunity will establish the NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research Network to Guide Foundational Research on Human Consciousness, leveraging a trans-NIH collaboration of 14 Institutes, Centers, and Offices dedicated to reducing the burden of nervous system disorders. Consciousness is central to numerous serious biomedical conditions, including coma, delirium, dementia, traumatic brain injury, stroke, sleep disorders, metabolic disorders, and seizures - conditions central to NIH's biomedical mission. Yet the neural mechanisms that support conscious states remain insufficiently understood, limiting clinicians’ ability to diagnose and treat patients effectively. Advancing foundational science on human consciousness will strengthen clinical decision-making and improve outcomes for patients with costly and hard-to-treat neurologic and systemic illnesses by:

  • Detecting consciousness in minimally responsive patients to guide prognosis, treatment, and ethical decisions (e.g., organ harvesting).
  • Improving understanding of consciousness in Alzheimer’s disease, related dementias, and delirium.
  • Investigating altered states in mental disorders to inform treatments.
  • Identifying sentience and state transitions under anesthesia and during recovery.
  • Advancing knowledge of sleep states and improving treatments for insomnia and other sleep disorders.
  • Exploring non-sensory visual perception (e.g., hallucinations, aphantasia) to deepen insight into mental health.
  • Evaluating therapeutic effects of consciousness-modulating interventions such as meditation, hypnosis, and neurostimulation.
  • Applying New Approach Methodologies (NAMs) to study human consciousness.

Despite its importance, biomedical research on consciousness lacks shared standards, resulting in fragmented efforts and limiting understanding of underlying neurocircuitry. To accelerate rigorous, reproducible, and ethically grounded research, this initiative will create a national interdisciplinary Research Network to strengthen and integrate consciousness-related neuroscience, rather than support discrete, hypothesis-driven projects. The Network will develop coordination frameworks, standards, and infrastructure, uniting expertise from neuroscience, neurology, psychiatry, psychology, anesthesiology, sleep and meditation research, computational science, AI, bioethics, and philosophy.

The Network’s goal is capacity building: developing and providing needed research resources to advance understanding of the neural mechanisms supporting conscious states. It will lead planning and consensus-building activities to:

  • Harmonize operational definitions across consciousness research.
  • Identify research settings, model systems, and experimental designs with the greatest potential.
  • Evaluate indicators and measures of consciousness for diverse scientific approaches.
  • Determine which measures best reflect preserved or perturbed neurobiological function.
  • Address essential ethical considerations.

To strengthen U.S. leadership and cultivate a highly trained workforce, the Network will provide interdisciplinary cross-training opportunities, such as workshops and visiting scholar programs, not feasible in siloed environments. This initiative will create resources that enable rigorous biomedical research on the neural mechanisms of conscious states, aligning with NIH's strategic priorities to improve population health and well-being.

Who can apply

Other Eligible ApplicantsIndian/Native American Tribal Governments (Other than Federally Recognized);Eligible Agencies of the Federal Government;U.S. Territory or Possession;Faith-based or Community-based Organizations;Regional Organizations

How to apply

Applications go through the official government listing. Grants Radar links you straight to the source.

View on Grants.gov

Agency contact: NCCIH Division of Extramural Research Program Officer · NCCIHDERFunding@nih.gov · Please contact via e-mail

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