The_20Scientist_20March_202019 (1)

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03.2019 | THE SCIENTIST 59

How to distribute money more fairly
across age groups is a question that sev-
eral funding bodies have grappled with
over the years. According to McDowell,
the European Research Council has set a
good example by creating separate fund-
ing schemes for early-, mid-, and late-
career investigators. That way, you’re
comparing “peer with peer, rather than
comparing a 70-year-old professor at
Harvard Med who has 40 years of papers
and track records to a 35-year-old new
investigator,” he says.
The NIH has gone back and forth on
the issue for years. In 2013, the agency
floated the idea of an “emeritus award” to
help senior investigators in the process
of winding down their research, But the
proposal drew criticism from research-
ers who perceived it as a way to chan-
nel even more money to older investiga-
tors. In 2017, the newly proposed Grant
Support Index (GSI), which would have
capped the number of grants an indi-

vidual can receive, was scrapped after
one month, again in response to con-
cerns voiced by the research community.
Instead, the NIH decided to put about
3 percent of its budget towards grants
for early- and mid-career investigators,
as part of the so-called Next Generation
Researchers Initiative.

Tilghman says that one of her main
concerns is the potential impact of this
hypercompetition on innovation in sci-
ence. “What I often hear from my junior
colleagues is, you won’t get funded if
you’re proposing something that looks at

all risky,” she explains. The system favors
proposals that can guarantee results but
will only move a field forward incremen-
tally, rather than potentially propelling it
into new, uncharted territory. The NIH
has tried to address this issue by creating
the New Innovator Awards (DP2), which
reward early-career researchers with

innovative proposals. But these need to
be scaled up, Tilghman says. “There are
simply not enough of them.”
For now, the main beneficiaries of
such initiatives are younger research-
ers. Often, this leaves mid-career

I am concerned that if we’re increasingly supporting an
aging scientifi c workforce, that we may risk losing part
of a generation of younger researchers and innovators.
 —Bruce Weinberg, Ohio State University

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