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Working Group on Basic Behavioral and Social Science Research Meets at NIH
The Office of the Director at the National Institutes of
Health (NIH) has organized a special working group to assess the basic
research program in the behavioral and social sciences across the NIH. The
Working Group is chaired by sociologist Linda Waite, PhD, of the
University of Chicago. It will report to the Advisory Council of the NIH
Director in December of 2004. The group met for the first time on
Wednesday, April 28, with the first half of the meeting open to the
public.
Raynard Kington, MD, PhD, Deputy Director of the NIH (also
former Director of the Office of Behavioral and Social Science Research at
NIH), spoke first and reviewed the charge to the group. The working group
will address issues related to NIH's support for research in the
behavioral and social sciences that is fundamental to the prevention,
treatment, and cure of illnesses but is not directed at a specific disease
or condition. Specifically, the group will review the existing portfolio
of basic behavioral and social sciences research across the NIH; identify
areas of opportunity in those sciences consistent with NIH's mission, that
NIH should consider supporting; examine the barriers to the submission and
peer review of basic research grant applications; make recommendations for
improving the basic behavioral and social science program of the NIH and
report on those recommendations to the Advisory Committee of the NIH
Director.
A panel representing the scientific community presented
their views: Steven Breckler, PhD (Executive Director for Science,
American Psychological Association); Barbara Wanchisen, PhD (Executive
Director of the Federation); Alan Kraut, PhD (Executive Director, American
Psychological Society); Richard Shiffrin, PhD (from Indiana University,
representing a group of basic researchers involved with the National
Academy of Sciences); and Howard Silver, PhD (Executive Director,
Consortium of Social Science Associations). Some of the speakers
highlighted particular areas of basic research that are underrepresented
at NIH, such as research on decision-making. Others provided information
on why basic behavioral and social science is key to the NIH mission. Dr.
Breckler, who recently arrived at his APA position from the National
Science Foundation, explained that most NIH-funded basic research would
not be fundable at NSF, to address an argument made by some at NIH that
NSF is the better home for basic research.
The next presenters were Jeremy Berg, PhD, the new
Director of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS),
who has been charged with addressing the lack of funding of basic
behavioral science in that institute, and Thomas Insel, MD, the Director
of the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), whose vision of
reshaping the NIMH research portfolio has prompted concern from basic
scientists, and whose institute is most likely the largest source of
funds for basic behavioral research. Dr. Berg presented an overview of the
NIGMS with some discussion of where he believes behavioral science might
be useful to his institute's mission, an issue that will likely be
assessed by the Working Group. Dr. Insel discussed the current
organizational distribution of funds at NIMH and stated that he is
interested in supporting basic science relevant to the
"disease-based" mission of the NIMH.
After the presentations were concluded, there was
discussion on the possibility of establishing an NIH institute or branch
of an institute devoted to basic behavioral and social science, but there
was no consensus on the idea. The remainder of the meeting was not open to
the public. There will be additional meetings of this group, and final
recommendations will be made to the Office of the Director sometime this
fall.
The NIH Liaison to this group is Virginia Cain, Acting Director of the
Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research.
Psychologist members of the Working Group include Laura
Carstensen, PhD, Stanford University; Richard J. Davidson, PhD, University
of Wisconsin-Madison; Susan Fiske, PhD, Princeton University; Frances
Horowitz, PhD, City University of New York; James Jackson, PhD, University
of Michigan; Robert Levenson, PhD, University of California- Berkeley; and
William T. Greenough, PhD, University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign.
Scientists
serving on the working group
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