91ÑÇÉ«´«Ã½ seeks feedback on NIH plan to change grant review criteria, scoring
The 91ÑÇÉ«´«Ã½ is seeking feedback on a National Institutes of Health proposal that would change the way peer reviewers evaluate grant applications. will close Feb. 28.
The NIH Center for Scientific Review issued a solicitation in December for public input on a proposed revised framework that would reduce the number of review criteria and change how they are scored.
The goal is two-fold. First, the NIH seeks to emphasize research merit and reduce emphasis on the reputation of the applicant investigators and their institutions. Second, the NIH seeks to reduce the administrative burden on study section volunteers.
Change is needed
The peer-review process ensures that the NIH funds excellent grant applications that will lead to important discoveries.
Reviewers who serve on study sections lend their expertise to evaluate the scientific merit of research proposals. However, some struggle to distinguish between ; others have criticized the peer-review process for , which disadvantages grant applicants from underrepresented racial groups and low-resourced institutions.
Over the past decade, the peer-review process has become increasingly burdensome on reviewers, who now must also evaluate compliance forms and nonscientific materials.

What’s different?
The proposes reducing the number of categories reviewers must evaluate and that reviewers focus on two major questions:
In addition, the working group proposes removing individual scoring for the investigator and environment. Instead, reviewers would qualitatively evaluate an applicant’s expertise and resources with ratings ranging from “fully capable” to “additional resources needed.”
If a reviewer finds inadequacies, they would have to justify them in writing. Notably, the applicant would have a chance to rebut concerns raised about expertise and resources.
Reviewers also would be required to provide a written justification for their overall score.
This approach is designed to shift the focus of grant review from investigator and institutional reputation to the merit of the proposed research, thereby reducing positive bias, to align with the CSR’s initiative to .
Furthermore, study section volunteers would review less material from the “Additional Review Considerations” section of the application.
The 91ÑÇÉ«´«Ã½ supports the NIH’s efforts to reduce bias in peer review and administrative burden on reviewers.
The public affairs team will collect feedback on the proposed framework through Feb. 28 and incorporate it into the society’s response to the NIH request for information.
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