Attribution of NIH/NIGMS Support
We need your help in raising awareness of NIH's role in supporting research advances made by grant recipients. Greater recognition of this role will enhance the American public's appreciation of the scope and impact of NIH support. By taking the actions described below, you will also be responding to a Congressional directive that grantees "acknowledge NIH's funding contribution when they publicize their research findings."
- Acknowledge NIH/NIGMS' full or partial support of your research in journal articles, oral or poster presentations, news releases, interviews with reporters and other communications. The citation in scientific publications should use the following format:
Research reported in this publication was supported by the National Institute of General Medical Science of the National Institutes of Health under award number R01GM085232.
If the research received funding through the Recovery Act, see Acknowledging Recovery Act Support.
- Alert the NIGMS program director who manages your grant if you have a significant finding accepted for publication, especially if your institution is planning a news release or if you have other reasons to expect media coverage of your work. The program director's name, telephone number and e-mail address are on your Notice of Grant Award. If you do not know your program director's name or telephone number, send e-mail to the NIGMS Office of Communications and Public Liaison or call this office at 301-496-7301. The head of the office is Ms. Ann Dieffenbach.
- Give your program director's name and telephone number to reporters who ask you to suggest scientists who could comment on your research. Please let your program director know if you do so and provide him or her with copies of your article(s) in press.
- Ask your institution's public information officer to contact the NIGMS Office of Communications and Public Liaison so that they can coordinate efforts to publicize important research progress. In addition to writing a news release when appropriate, NIGMS may highlight such progress in feature stories, reports or testimony to Congress and in the "News" section on our World Wide Web home page. We will, of course, honor any embargoes on journal articles.
This page last reviewed on May 17, 2012