NINDS Staff Daofen Chen and Brian Haugen grab their bikes as part of Bike to Work Day. Bicycling is an environmentally friendly, cost-effective, fun and healthy way to get to work. Rain or shine, May is National Bike Month!
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Research Services
Bethesda, Maryland 50,876 followers
Our mission is to seek knowledge about the brain and nervous system and reduce the burden of neurological disease.
About us
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- Website
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https://www.ninds.nih.gov/
External link for National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
- Industry
- Research Services
- Company size
- 201-500 employees
- Headquarters
- Bethesda, Maryland
- Type
- Government Agency
- Founded
- 1950
Locations
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Primary
31 Center Dr
Bethesda, Maryland 20814, US
Employees at National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Updates
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Join NINDS on 5/20 for the Novel Approaches to Preventing Publication Bias Workshop. We’ll bring together a diverse set of individuals who work to promote scientific rigor and transparency. Register: https://lnkd.in/ezqK7RXw
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We are only one month away from the 10th Annual #BRAINInitiative Conference! Be sure to register so you can attend Dr. Viviana Gradinaru’s plenary talk, “Blood-Brain Barrier: Friend and Foe.” https://lnkd.in/e2c7kCCs #studyBRAIN #BRAINConference
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Check out our 2024 OPEN Spotlight series highlighting Dr. Nathan A. Smith, Xilma Ortiz-Gonzalez, and Laura Cocas! Read about how their research accomplishments, resilience, and mentorship shaped their successful careers: https://lnkd.in/eHQgd6VG #OPENSpotlight #NINDSdiversity
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#MECFS is a complex, debilitating disease that affects millions of people worldwide with no FDA-approved treatments. On May 15, NINDS released the ME/CFS Research Roadmap, a report that lays the foundation for advancing scientific understanding, improving diagnoses, and developing treatments for ME/CFS. The report, which draws upon feedback from the broader ME/CFS community, provides a detailed snapshot of what is known about ME/CFS and identifies research priorities to move the field towards clinical trials. The report was developed by a diverse team of experts, including scientists, healthcare providers, leaders of non-profit and advocacy organizations, and people with lived experience, including #PWME, family members, and caregivers. Read the report: https://go.nih.gov/cffRUCp
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Voting is now open for the 2024 #BRAINInitiative Photo and Video Contest! Help us choose the winning submissions. Vote today to see if your pick gets announced at the #BRAINConference this June! https://go.nih.gov/bTvrIMF #studyBRAIN
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Tune in to the 223rd meeting of the National Advisory neurological Disorders and Stroke Council 5/15 at 10am EST. Discussions include Director's updates, CSR update, #MECFS research roadmap, & #BRAINInitiative update. Follow along live here: https://go.nih.gov/xnb1B6m
National Advisory Neurological Disorders and Stroke Council
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Fellowship (F) and career development award (K) applications typically include one primary mentor and one or several co-mentors. Each of these mentors, combined, should possess the expertise necessary for accomplishing the training and/or career development plans proposed in your application. You should include at least one mentor with appropriate expertise in each technical skill or knowledge gap that you will address in your plan. Your primary mentor should have adequate funding to support your proposed research and ideally, have a track record of guiding trainees on to successful careers in academic research. If your primary mentor has had few trainees, an experienced mentor who has a strong training record, who will be able to contribute meaningfully, should be included. If you are a clinician, at least one mentor should be a clinician-scientist with a strong research funding record, to provide career guidance. One primary mentor may satisfy all of these things, or you may need a team of mentors. There is no “magic number” of mentors that is appropriate. There is also no limit on how many mentors you can include. However, you should include only one mentor per role and not include individuals who won’t contribute meaningfully to your research and/or career development (i.e., more isn’t better; you should have just the right number). #trainingtuesday #phdlife #academiclife
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Tune in live for the #BRAINInitiative Multi-Council Working Group meeting beginning today at 12:00pm EST. Discussions include an update from NIH BRAIN Director Dr. John Ngai & promoting equity through BRAIN technology dissemination partnerships. https://go.nih.gov/p4WvG3W #studyBRAIN
BRAIN Multi-Council Working Group Meeting
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Workshop opportunity! Interested in discussing using neural stimulation and brain recordings to understand brain function? Register for this #BRAINInitiative 2-day virtual workshop, exploring progress made, challenges to overcome, and potential impact. More details here: https://go.nih.gov/rBavITh #studyBRAIN
Upcoming workshop: Advancing human neuroscience through neural stimulation and recording
braininitiative.nih.gov