“Bringing research development support for The Texas A&M University System members
to support the research enterprise across the System.”
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Rural Literacy Initiative
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Research Excellence Fund at Tarleton
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Research Security Impact Award
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Next Gen Research Reactor
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| New Literacy Initiative Aims
to Level the Playing Field
for Rural Schools |
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Tarleton State University |
Research Excellence Fund Awards $500,000 to Tarleton State for Doctoral Fellowships |
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Tarleton State University has received $500,000 from The Texas A&M University System’s Research Excellence Fund to support doctoral fellowships for graduate students. “We are grateful for the unwavering support of The Texas A&M System Board of Regents and Chancellor Glenn Hegar, whose leadership and commitment continue to expand opportunities for our students, faculty, and researchers,” said Tarleton State President Dr. James Hurley. “This award is another impactful milestone in our continued growth in research and innovation. Initiatives like this accelerate our progress, reinforce Tarleton State’s role in advancing research, and strengthen our commitment to developing doctoral scholars whose discoveries will help shape the future of Texas and beyond.” The funding will provide financial support to attract and retain high-caliber doctoral candidates across a range of disciplines, thereby enhancing the university’s research capacity and contributing to the development of the next generation of scholars and innovators.
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These fellowships are designed to enhance Tarleton State’s graduate programs by supporting students’ research and professional development, enabling them to focus on advancing knowledge and contributing to the university’s broader research objectives. By investing in doctoral education, the university aims to expand its research output, foster interdisciplinary collaboration, and enhance opportunities for innovation across academic programs.
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Texas A&M University Chemical Engineering |
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Dr. Abdoulaye Djire, an Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering at Texas A&M University, has been granted an NSF CAREER award to advance the development of a novel class of stable nitride MXenes, referred to as MNenes. These two-dimensional materials are derived from naturally abundant transition metals. The objective of this project is to create highly conductive, ultrathin materials suitable for applications in clean energy, high-capacity energy storage, quantum computing, and electrochemical manufacturing, while addressing the instability challenges that have historically constrained the effectiveness of carbide-based MXenes.
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The research will utilize advanced molten-salt etching techniques, operando synchrotron X-ray diffraction, neutron scattering, and computational modeling to elucidate and control the transformation from MAX phases to MNenes. This approach aims to uncover critical structure-property-stability relationships that are essential for designing next-generation two-dimensional materials.
Furthermore, the project will provide mentoring and practical opportunities for K–12 students, undergraduates from Historically Black Colleges and Universities, U.S. graduate students, and international collaborators. This initiative aspires to promote broader participation in STEM fields and to enhance the United States’ leadership in the advancement of critical materials technologies.
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The Texas A&M University System |
TAMUS Receives 4th National Counterintelligence Award at World’s Largest Research Security Conference |
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The Texas A&M University System will be honored with a national counterintelligence award at the 2026 National Association for Campus Research Security (NACRS) conference, recognizing the System’s leadership, spearheaded by Dr. Kevin Gamache, in safeguarding sensitive research and advancing security protocols across its member institutions. The award highlights the System’s comprehensive approach to research security, including training, risk assessment, and collaboration with federal and state partners to protect critical technologies and information.
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These initiatives strengthen the System’s ability to detect and mitigate threats to intellectual property, research data, and proprietary innovations while promoting a culture of awareness and accountability among faculty, staff, and students. The recognition underscores the Texas A&M University System’s national prominence in research security and its commitment to maintaining safe and resilient research environments across all campuses.
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Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station |
TEES, ZettaJoule to Explore Building Transformative Very-High-Temperature Gas Research Reactor |
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The proposed facility would provide a platform for cutting-edge experimentation in gas-cooled reactor technology, offering new opportunities for interdisciplinary research, workforce development, and industry partnerships. If developed, the reactor could contribute to advances in clean energy production, high-temperature industrial processes, and innovative nuclear technologies.
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Around the System: Headline News |
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Governor Abbott Announces MP Materials Expansion To Boost Rare Earth Magnet Manufacturing In Texas
Governor Greg Abbott announced that MP Materials will expand its rare earth magnet manufacturing operations in Northlake, Texas, strengthening the domestic supply chain for critical minerals used in advanced technologies. The expansion aims to increase U.S. production capacity for rare earth magnets, which are essential components in electric vehicles, defense systems, and other high-tech applications.
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Congressman Williams Secures $3.5 Million for Tarleton Innovation and Incubation Hub
Congressman Roger Williams is proud to announce that $3.575 million in Community Project Funding has been secured for Tarleton State University’s Innovation and Incubation Hub site preparation project through the fiscal year 2025 Transportation, Housing and Urban Development (THUD) Appropriations bill.
Texas A&M at Galveston Unveils $52 Million High-Tech Facility
Texas A&M University at Galveston constructed a new 54,000-square-foot Engineering Classroom and Research Building (ECRB). The new building strengthens the state’s engineering pipeline, expanding capacity for hands-on learning, innovation, and coastal research.
Dr. Myoung-gwi Ryou Named Dean of Tarleton College of Health and Clinical Professions
Dr. Myoung-gwi Ryou has been named Dean of the College of Health and Clinical Professions at Tarleton State University. With over 20 years of research experience, Dr. Ryou specializes in translational studies aimed at developing interventions for ischemia and reperfusion injuries impacting the heart and brain.
Mays Business School Launches Center for Applied Entrepreneurship and Innovation
Texas A&M University’s Mays Business School has launched the Center for Applied Entrepreneurship and Innovation, positioning Aggies at the center of that momentum by helping students identify and pursue entrepreneurial pathways grounded in real opportunity, real markets, and real execution.
Texas A&M AgriLife Modernizes Greenhouses to Support Innovative Plant Science
A major renovation to the greenhouses at the Borlaug Center for Southern Crop Improvement ushers in a new era of plant research at Texas A&M AgriLife. Dr. Cliff Lamb, Director of AgriLife Research, stated that the state-of-the-art facility will enable researchers to advance leading-edge innovations in sustainable agriculture and natural resources, and promote economic strength and healthy living.
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Texas A&M–Kingsville Establishes Javelina Engineering Academies With Regional Colleges
TAMUK has launched new Javelina Engineering Academies in partnership with regional community colleges to expand access to engineering education. The program allows students to begin coursework at partner institutions while receiving support from TAMUK and creating a pathway to complete a bachelor’s degree in engineering.
Leveraging Lessons to Bring In-Person and Remote Students Together
Faculty at Texas A&M University–Central Texas are applying lessons learned from hybrid and remote teaching to better integrate students attending classes both in person and online. The effort focuses on improving engagement and collaboration through technology and course design that bring remote and classroom learners together in shared learning experiences.
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APLU Calls for Congressional Action: Codify the Financial Accountability in Research (FAIR) Model in FY 2027
Indirect costs, also known as facilities and administrative (F&A) costs, are the real costs of research that support scientific progress and bolster American innovation leadership in a highly competitive global landscape. The Financial Accountability in Research (FAIR) Model is a new approach to supporting research through indirect cost recovery and ensuring American leadership in science and innovation. The proposal, which was developed by the Joint Associations Group (JAG), was widely cited in FY26 appropriations bills as meriting further consideration by Congress in FY27.
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Around the System: Honors |
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Drs. Guillermo Aguilar, Heng Pan, Xingyong Song, and Stavros Kalafatis from the Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station have earned the prestigious distinction for their impactful contributions to the welfare of society and economic progress from the National Academy of Inventors (NAI).
Texas A&M University–Texarkana President, Dr. Ross Alexander, was named a recipient of Insight Into Academia Magazine’s 2026 Trailblazer in Higher Education Award. This prestigious national honor recognizes senior leaders whose bold, strategic innovations have advanced institutional excellence, strengthened community relationships, and created meaningful, measurable impact for students, employees, and the broader academic ecosystem.
Dr. Lei Zou, Associate Professor of Geography at Texas A&M University’s College of Arts and Sciences, was named an Early-Career Research Fellow by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM). His research supports safer, more resilient Gulf Coast communities through advanced geospatial modeling.
Dr. LaVelle Hendricks, Professor of Counseling at East Texas A&M University, has been named the first recipient of the 2026 Peter Bell Premier Addictions Educator of the Year Award by the Museum of African American Addictions, Treatment and Recovery. The national award recognizes outstanding leadership in addiction education, culturally responsive counseling, and community impact.
Dr. Albert E. Patterson, Assistant Professor of Engineering Technology and Industrial Distribution at the Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station, has been selected as a recipient of the 2026 Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) Ralph R. Teetor International Educational Award. This distinguished recognition celebrates outstanding early-career educators who strengthen the connection between teaching and professional practice through research, leadership, and engagement with industry and engineering societies.
Dr. Jason Smith, Associate Professor of Animal Science at the Texas A&M AgriLife High Plains Research and Extension Center in Canyon, was recognized by the American Society of Animal Science with the ASAS Extension Award for his achievements in outreach and extension.
Drs. Xuemei Zhu, Chanam Lee, and Manasa Hegde from the College of Architecture at Texas A&M University, College Station, earned the Michael P. O’Donnell Award from the American Journal of Health Promotion (AJHP) for a study linking multi-family housing design to residents’ physical activity.
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Around the System: Research Highlights |
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Dr. Chander Negi, Postdoctoral Research Associate in the lab of Dr. Ivan Rusyn at the Texas A&M University College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, helped develop a “liver-on-a-chip” device to improve drug safety testing. The platform more closely mimics human liver function and blood flow, offering a reliable method for detecting harmful drug effects before clinical trials.
Dr. Shreya Raghavan, Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station, along with collaborators from Vanderbilt University and the University of Virginia, led research that developed engineered tissue models and advanced imaging techniques to study how colorectal cancer cells hide and remain dormant in the liver. The work recreates key aspects of the liver’s microenvironment to reveal metastatic cancer cells that are often invisible to conventional detection methods, providing new tools to investigate cancer recurrence and potential therapeutic strategies.
Dr. Hatice Ceylan Koydemir, assistant professor at Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station, led the development of a smart sensor system for catheter bags that detects early signs of urinary tract infections by monitoring chemical changes in urine. The low-cost, color-changing sensor provides a clear visual indicator, enabling faster clinical response and improved patient outcomes.
Dr. Hatice Ceylan Koydemir, assistant professor at Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station, leads an international team developing an at-home device that could allow pregnant women to quickly screen for preeclampsia. Beyond preeclampsia, Koydemir and Fernando hope that the science conducted for this project could also be adapted for other health challenges, like cancer detection.
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Drs. Chenglin Wu, Jiaoli Li, and Weijia Liu from the Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station, as well as Drs. Jeffrey Cirillo and Kent Koster from the Texas A&M School of Medicine joined researchers from Michigan State University to develop a tissue-adhesive sensor for real-time oral health monitoring to combat long-term issues such as gum disease and tooth loss.
Drs. Lavanya Elluri, Rahul Dwivedi, Sunme Lee, and Ran Li from Texas A&M University–Central Texas have examined whether the critical compliance standards for data protection regulations related to Internet of Things (IoT) devices. Their findings, published in the International Journal of Information Security, emphasize the importance of adopting privacy-by-design at the initial stages of IoT implementation.
Dr. Zina Trost, Associate Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences at Texas A&M University, College Station, is researching the use of virtual reality to help relieve patients suffering from neuropathic pain caused by spinal cord injuries.
Drs. Dominique Lord and Srinivas R. Geedipally—crash analytics experts at the Texas A&M Transportation Institute—joined Dr. Xiao Qin of the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee to publish the second edition of Highway Safety Analytics and Modeling. The updated edition builds on the widely used first edition and serves as a comprehensive resource for transportation engineers, policymakers, researchers, analysts, designers, and graduate students working in highway safety.
Dr. Martin M. Jacobsen, Associate Professor of English at West Texas A&M University, explores the dense lyrical output of the prominent metal band, Iron Maiden, in his recent monograph, Pieces of Minds: The Intellectual Tradition of Iron Maiden.
Dr. Antonietta Quigg, Regents Professor of Marine Biology for Texas A&M University at Galveston, uses phytoplankton as model organisms to address pressing environmental questions about water, climate, and energy at her world-renowned Phytoplankton Dynamics Lab. Her lab focuses predominantly on the Gulf of Mexico, Galveston Bay, and other Texas bayous, but also works alongside colleagues in different regions of the world.
Dr. Karienn Souza, Research Assistant Professor at the Texas A&M University College of Medicine, is leading a team of researchers to explore how sleep habits and desynchronized circadian rhythms may trigger brain inflammation associated with dementia risk, with support from the Dementia & Alzheimer’s Research Initiative (DARI).
Dr. Eduardo Huaytán-Martínez, Assistant Professor and Director of the Spanish program at West Texas A&M University, has recently published the monograph Montalván, La Negra, which spotlights systemic oppression in Peru in an annotated edition of Zoila Aurora Cáceres’s 1929 novel.
Drs. Sherecce Fields and Rachel Smallman from Texas A&M University, College Station, have dedicated multiple collaborative studies to the psychology of risky health behaviors. Their most recent research paper, published in Substance Use & Misuse, explores the understudied territory of e-cigarettes and how protective behavioral strategies, such as keeping e-cigarettes out of reach or limiting daily use, affect behavior.
Dr. Xingmao “Samuel” Ma, Professor of Civil & Environmental Engineering at the Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station, and his team are uncovering how nanoplastics and heavy metals interact in a controlled hydroponic model, revealing new insights into food safety. Their study, published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, shows that lettuce plants exposed to nanoplastics and cadmium, a toxic heavy metal, absorb up to 61% more cadmium into their edible leaves than plants exposed to cadmium alone.
Dr. Hisham Al-bataineh, Associate Professor of Physics at Texas A&M University–Kingsville, joined a group of international researchers to assess the energy and timing resolution of the Neutral Particle Spectrometer (NPS), an advanced calorimeter designed to measure neutral electromagnetic particles with high precision in energy, time, and position. Their findings, published in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A, serve as a reference for current and future precision measurements in hadronic physics.
Drs. Md Nizam Uddin, Faycal Znidi, and Mohamed Morsy, faculty members from the engineering department at Texas A&M University–Texarkana, recently investigated the availability and practical applications of polymer nanocomposites and polymer hydrogel nanocomposites for collecting and producing pure drinking water from the atmosphere. Their findings, published in Reference Module in Materials Science and Materials Engineering, offer insights into the applications of nanotechnology in the water industry for producing pure water.
Dr. Wen-Hsuan Chang, Assistant Professor of Educational Psychology at Texas A&M University, College Station, is exploring how prioritizing parents’ well-being can strengthen disability systems and improve outcomes for children and young adults. Her research reveals that the most effective support systems share a common purpose: helping parents feel more in control and connected, thereby preventing burnout.
Dr. Samuel Brody, Regents Professor of Marine and Coastal Environmental Science and Director of the Disaster Resilient Texas (IDRT) at Texas A&M University at Galveston, is leading a team from the IDRT that has created a tool that can show residents, emergency responders and policy makers where power outages are occurring in near real-time, helping users respond to disasters faster, safer and smarter.
Dr. Jessica Brannon-Wranosky, Distinguished Professor of Digital Humanities and History at East Texas A&M University, is the Founding Project Director for the “Handbook of Texas Women.” From educators to ranchers, scientists to early land-grant recipients, and artists to elected officials, the project helps ensure the stories of Texas women are researched, written, and shared with the public.
Dr. Chris Cobos, Assistant Professor of Environmental Soil Science at the Texas A&M AgriLife Center at Vernon, TX, is working to optimize dryland production systems, helping producers maintain production in arid environments. His research will incorporate drone aerial imagery, artificial intelligence (AI), and machine learning models into agronomic field research trials.
Dr. Jessica Galloway-Peña, Assistant Professor in the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences’ Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, led a study examining how antibiotic use during leukemia treatment alters the gut microbiome. The research found that antibiotic exposure significantly reshapes microbial communities in patients undergoing therapy, offering insights that could inform strategies to manage infection risk and treatment outcomes.
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2026 APLU Board on Agriculture Assembly Highlights Innovations in Research, Extension, and Teaching
The 2026 Board on Agriculture Assembly and Council for Agricultural Research, Extension, and Teaching (CARET) Conference convened university leaders, researchers, and stakeholders to discuss emerging trends and best practices in agricultural research, education, and outreach. Sessions focused on workforce development, innovative extension programs, and strategies to enhance collaboration between land-grant universities and industry partners nationwide.
Report: Most States to Invest in VBC with Rural Health Funds
As part of the Rural Health Transformation Program, 42 states are expanding or establishing new alternative payment models, according to a recent analysis. The vast majority of states are prioritizing investments in telehealth and digital health.
Texas Rural Health Collective Virtual Conference - Texas Rural Health Association (event)
Join TRHA and the University of Texas at Arlington’s Center for Rural Health and Nursing for the 2026 Rural Health Collective: a virtual, educational week focused on rural healthcare in Texas.
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The Genesis Mission: Transforming Science and Energy with AI
The DOE Office of Science (SC), Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation (CMEI), Office of Environmental Management (EM), Office of Nuclear Energy (NE), Office of Electricity (OE), and Hydrocarbons and Geothermal Office (HGEO) hereby announce interest in receiving applications from interdisciplinary teams addressing the Genesis Mission National Science and Technology Challenges to accelerate scientific discovery and research and development (R&D) workflows using novel artificial intelligence (AI) models and frameworks. By achieving AI advantage, these teams will advance the DOE's mission and ensure America’s security and prosperity by addressing energy, environmental, and nuclear challenges through science and technology. Teams are encouraged to leverage the extensive scientific and data resources of the DOE/National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), the National Laboratories, U.S. industry, and academia. The resulting AI models and workflows, if successful, may be integrated into the American Science Cloud.
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U.S. Department of Energy Announces $352 Million for Energy Frontier Research Centers
The U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science has announced $352 million in funding for a new cohort of Energy Frontier Research Centers (EFRCs), supporting multi-institutional teams that conduct fundamental research in the energy sciences. The program funds collaborative, interdisciplinary centers focused on topics such as energy production, storage, and materials, with awards typically supporting multi-year research efforts led by universities, national laboratories, and other research institutions.
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NSF Reopens Major Research Instrumentation Program for FY2026
The National Science Foundation has announced the FY2026 competition for the Major Research Instrumentation (MRI) Program, which supports the acquisition or development of shared research equipment at universities and research institutions. The program, which was not offered in FY2025, has a proposal deadline window of October 15 to November 16, 2026, with awards up to $4 million to support multi-user instrumentation that enables cutting-edge research and training.
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Early Career Research Program (ECRP)
DOE Office of Science hereby invites applications for support under the ECRP in the following program areas: Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR); Basic Energy Sciences (BES); Biological and Environmental Research (BER); Fusion Energy Sciences (FES); High Energy Physics (HEP); Nuclear Physics (NP); Isotope Research and Development and Production (DOE IP). The purpose of this program is to support the development of individual research programs of outstanding scientists early in their careers and to stimulate research careers in the areas supported by SC.
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DOE Announces $500 Million to Strengthen Domestic Critical Materials Supply Chains
The U.S. Department of Energy has announced a $500 million funding opportunity to support research, development, and demonstration projects that strengthen domestic supply chains for critical minerals and materials used in energy technologies and advanced manufacturing. Universities, national laboratories, and industry partners are encouraged to apply for projects addressing areas such as materials extraction, processing, recycling, and substitution to advance U.S. capabilities in critical materials.
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The Texas A&M University System Research Excellence Fund
The Research Excellence Fund (REF) is a Texas A&M University System–wide, competitive, merit‑based funding program designed to strengthen research capacity, foster collaboration among System members, and enhance competitiveness for major external funding.
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| Rural Practitioners of Texas Conference
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Rural physicians, advanced practitioners, healthcare professionals, and students preparing for careers in rural healthcare are invited to this two-day conference dedicated to addressing the unique challenges of rural healthcare.
Date: March 27-28, 2026
Location: Boerne, Tapatio Springs Hill Country Resort
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The 20th ASCE ASD Biennial International Conference on Engineering, Science, Construction and Operations in Challenging Environments, Earth & Space
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| TEES Annual Research Conference (TARC)
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The Texas A&M University System Research Development website features federal agency resources to support System researchers with checklists, outlines, templates, graphic and design concepts, and other information for NSF, NIH, USDA, DOE, DOD, and NASA. We continually add new resources to support specific research opportunities.
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National Science Foundation |
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| Updated Merit Review Process
NSF uses a merit review process in which expert reviewers evaluate all proposals based on the National Science Board-approved criteria of intellectual merit and broader impacts to help guide funding decisions and ensure that NSF supports high-quality research with societal value.
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A January 27, 2026, Department of Energy (DOE) Policy Flash states that its earlier Policy Flashes limiting indirect cost rates are no longer in effect. The Policy Flash explains that the Commerce, Justice, Science; Energy and Water Development; and Interior and Environment Appropriations Act of 2026, H.R. 6938, was signed into law January 23, 2026 and that its Section 313, “states that DOE is required to apply the indirect cost rates, as described in 2 CFR 200.414, including with respect to the approval of deviations from negotiated indirect cost rates to the same extent and the same manners that was applied in fiscal year 2024.” The earlier Policy Flashes were described in COGR’s document, Update from COGR on Department of Energy Limitations on Reimbursement of Indirect Costs .
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National Institutes of Health |
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NIH Implements Common Forms for Biosketch and Current & Pending Support
Starting January 25, 2026, NIH will require SciENcv Common Forms for all Biographical Sketch and Current and Pending Support submissions. Senior/key personnel must link their ORCID iD and certify forms in SciENcv as part of NIH’s effort to standardize disclosure requirements across federal agencies. Read More
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Changes to Peer Review at the National Institutes of Health
Peer-review emergency modifications include: reducing applications discussed from 50% to 30-35%; simplifying summary statements with a sentence on committee consensus; and listing score-driving points. NIH also introduced a unified funding strategy to provide clearer, more consistent decision-making across all Institutes, Centers, and Offices.
Emergency Modifications
Unified Strategy
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Dr. Costas N. Georghiades
Texas A&M University
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Dr. Pete van Hengstum
Texas A&M University at Galveston
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Dr. Magesh Rajan
Prairie View A&M University
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Dr. Rupa Iyer
Tarleton State University
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Dr. Ruby A. Ynalvez
Texas A&M International University
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Dr. Ahmed Mahdy
Texas A&M University–Corpus Christi
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Dr. Jose F. Espiritu
Texas A&M University-Kingsville
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Dr. Angela Spaulding
West Texas A&M University
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Dr. Brent Donham
East Texas A&M University
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Dr. Sushil Sharma
Texas A&M University–Texarkana
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Dr. Mohamed Abdelrahman
Texas A&M University–San Antonio
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Dr. Jeff Kirk
Texas A&M University–Central Texas
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Dr. Joann S. Olsen
Texas A&M University–Victoria
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Dr. Amir Ibrahim
Texas A&M AgriLife Research
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Dr. Rodney Bowersox
Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station
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Dr. Dan Hale
Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service
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Dr. Aaron Stottlemyer
Texas A&M Forest Service
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Gordon Lohmeyer, CFPS / PI
Texas A&M Engineering Extension Service
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Dr. Joe Zietsman
Texas A&M Transportation Institute
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Dr. Kiril M. Dimitrov
Texas A&M Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory
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Dr. Michael W. Hull
Texas Division of Emergency Management
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| researchdevelopment@tamus.edu
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