Announcement of Requirements and Registration for the Challenge To Identify Audacious Goals in Vision Research and Blindness Rehabilitation, 48162-48164 [2012-19801]
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48162
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 156 / Monday, August 13, 2012 / Notices
cardiovascular devices. These issues
include, but are not limited to:
• Considerations that go into
determining if a change is appropriate
for an annual report or 30-day notice
(e.g., equipment changes, software
changes, supplier changes);
• Best practices for submission
contents;
• Other issues and questions raised
by the public workshop attendees that
are relevant to 30-day notices and
annual reports for cardiovascular
devices.
Dated: August 7, 2012.
Leslie Kux,
Assistant Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2012–19747 Filed 8–10–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–P
National Institutes of Health
Announcement of Requirements and
Registration for the Challenge To
Identify Audacious Goals in Vision
Research and Blindness Rehabilitation
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 3719.
The National Eye Institute
(NEI) is announcing the launch of the
Challenge to Identify Audacious Goals
in Vision Research and Blindness
Rehabilitation (Challenge) to stimulate
innovation in establishing a national
vision research agenda. This Challenge
seeks entries from the general public,
not just those typically engaged in
vision research. The challenge calls for
submission of audacious goals in any
area relevant to NEI’s mission to
conduct and support research, training,
health information dissemination, and
other programs with respect to blinding
eye diseases, visual disorders,
mechanisms of visual function,
preservation of sight, and the special
health problems and requirements of the
blind (42 U.S.C. 285i).
The NEI will select up to 20 winners
to receive a $3,000 cash prize and will
host the winners at the NEI Audacious
Goals Development Meeting to present
and discuss their winning entries with
a broad audience of scientists, NEI staff,
and other stakeholders. This challenge
will generate valuable contributions
from NEI’s many and varied
stakeholders to inform the Institute’s
strategic plan, energize the Institute’s
research efforts, increase public
awareness of vision research, and
enhance the national effort to reduce the
burden of ocular disorders and diseases
worldwide.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
16:29 Aug 10, 2012
(1) Submission period begins August
13, 2012.
(2) Submission period ends November
12, 2012, 6:00 p.m. ET.
(3) Winners notified January 7, 2013.
(4) Winners present and discuss their
winning entry at the NEI Audacious
Goals Development Meeting in early
2013 (date will be announced on
https://www.nei.nih.gov/challenge).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Richard S. Fisher, Ph.D., Associate
Director for Science Policy and
Legislation, National Eye Institute,
Phone: 301–496–4308. [NEIPlan@mail.
nih.gov.]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Subject of Challenge Competition
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
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This Challenge to Identify Audacious
Goals in Vision Research and Blindness
Rehabilitation (Challenge) adds an
exciting, unique component to the NEI’s
current strategic planning effort. In the
past, these planning efforts relied
primarily on the expertise of NEIfunded scientists to review the state of
the science and describe current specific
research needs and opportunities. This
Challenge seeks input from all eligible
individuals (Contestants)—not just
vision research scientists—to describe
(a) an audacious goal in vision research
and blindness rehabilitation, (b) how to
achieve the goal within about 10 years,
and (c) the impact of reaching the goal.
Rules for Participating in the
Competition
1. Eligibility: To be eligible to win a
prize under this Challenge, a Contestant:
Æ Shall have registered to participate
in the competition under the rules
promulgated by the NEI and explained
in this Notice;
Æ Shall have complied with all the
requirements under this section;
Æ Shall be an individual at least 18
years of age and shall be a citizen or
permanent resident of the United States;
Æ May not be a Federal entity or
Federal employee acting within the
scope of their employment. Federal
employees seeking to participate in this
contest outside the scope of their
employment should consult their ethics
official prior to developing their
submission;
Æ May not be employees of the NIH
or any other company or individual
involved with the design, production,
execution, judging, or distribution of the
Challenge and their immediate family
(spouse, parents and step-parents,
siblings and step-siblings, and children
and step-children) and household
members (people who share the same
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residence at least three (3) months out
of the year);
2. Federal grantees may not use
Federal funds to develop America
COMPETES Act Challenge applications
unless consistent with the purpose of
their grant award (Grantees should
consult with their cognizant Grants
Management Official to make this
determination); and
3. Federal contractors may not use
Federal funds from a contract to develop
a Challenge entry or to fund efforts in
support of a Challenge submission.
4. A Contestant shall not be deemed
ineligible because the individual used
Federal facilities or consulted with
Federal employees during a competition
if the facilities and employees are made
available to all individuals participating
in the competition on an equitable basis.
5. Liability: By participating in this
Challenge, Contestants agree to assume
any and all risks and waive claims
against the Federal Government and its
related entities, except in the case of
willful misconduct, for any injury,
death, damage, or loss of property,
revenue, or profits, whether direct,
indirect, or consequential, arising from
participation in this prize contest,
whether the injury, death, damage, or
loss arises through negligence or
otherwise.
6. Indemnification: By participating in
this Challenge, Contestants agree to
indemnify the Federal Government
against third party claims for damages
arising from or related to competition
activities.
7. Insurance: Based on the subject
matter of the contest, the type of work
that it will possibly require, as well as
an analysis of the likelihood of any
claims for death, bodily injury, or
property damage, or loss potentially
resulting from contest participation,
Contestants are not required to obtain
liability insurance or demonstrate
financial responsibility in order to
participate in this contest.
8. By participating in this Challenge,
each individual agrees to abide by all
rules set forth in this Notice and the
Challenge.gov Terms of Participation
(https://challenge.gov/terms).
9. Each Entry Must:
Æ Be limited to a maximum of 4,000
characters, including spaces (roughly a
single page). In addition to information
requested by https://www.nei.nih.gov/
challenge to identify the entry,
Contestants must complete three
statements about the proposed
audacious goal. The following
statements, which will be the subject of
the judging, are:
D It would be fantastic if * * *’’
(Explain why the goal is audacious and
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 156 / Monday, August 13, 2012 / Notices
how the goal fits within NEI’s mission,
which is listed in the Challenge
summary.)
D To achieve the audacious goal,
* * *’’ (Discuss the feasibility of
achieving the goal within about a 10
year period, including the technological,
scientific, or other advances that are
needed to reach the goal.)
D If the audacious goal is achieved,
the impact would be * * *’’
Note: Examples of what would have
been considered audacious goals in the
past can be found at in the ‘‘Additional
Information’’ section of this notice.
10. Contestants may submit more than
one audacious goal entry, as long as
they are unique.
11. The NEI will not select as a
winner an individual who is currently
on the Excluded Parties List (https://
www.epls.gov/).
12. Entries must be original works
developed solely by the Contestant and
not infringe any intellectual property or
any other rights of any third party.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Process for Registration and Submitting
an Entry
For this challenge, registration and
submitting an entry are completed in a
single step. Participants can register and
submit an entry for this challenge by
following the instructions at the
Challenge to Identify Audacious Goals
in Vision Research and Blindness
Rehabilitation Web site: www.nei.nih.
gov/challenge.
Amount of the Prize
Up to 20 winners will each be
awarded a $3,000 prize and up to $2,000
in travel reimbursement to participate in
the NEI Audacious Goals Development
Meeting in the Washington, DC area in
early 2013. Prizes awarded under this
competition will be paid by electronic
funds transfer and may be subject to
Federal income taxes. The NEI, one of
the National Institutes of Health, which
is a component of the Department of
Health and Human Services, will
comply with the Internal Revenue
Service withholding and reporting
requirements, where applicable.
Winners will be invited to lead small
group discussions on their submitted
goal and understand that the submitted
ideas may be combined with others
during the meeting as part of the process
to identify audacious goals. If winners
are not present at the meeting, their
entries will still be discussed. Travel
expenses to and from the meeting
location, lodging and meals will be
separately reimbursed up to $2,000 and
in accordance with Federal Government
travel policy. Winners will need to
provide receipts to document travel
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expenses for reimbursement purposes in
accordance with National Institutes of
Health policy and applicable laws and
regulations (https://oma.od.nih.gov/
manualchapters/management/1500/).
Basis Upon Which Winners Will Be
Selected
The audacious goals entries will be
de-identified and then will be judged by
a selection board composed of NIH
employees in compliance with the
requirements of the America
COMPETES Act and the Department of
Health and Human Services judging
guidelines (https://www.hhs.gov/open/
initiatives/challenges/judges_guidance.
html). Judges will be named after
commencement of the challenge and
will consist of senior scientists and
clinicians with knowledge of vision
research and ocular disorders as well as
allied biomedical disciplines. The
judges will consult with technical
advisors from biomedical, clinical, or
other scientific disciplines if it is
necessary to properly evaluate entries.
The judges will make selections based
upon the following criteria:
1. Relevance to the NEI Mission: Each
entry will be rated on how the goal
would further the NEI mission to
conduct and support research, training,
health information dissemination, and
other programs with respect to blinding
eye diseases, visual disorders,
mechanisms of visual function,
preservation of sight, and the special
health problems and requirements of the
blind.
2. Audaciousness: Each entry will be
rated on whether the proposed goal is
bold, daring, original or unconventional,
exceptionally innovative, creative,
novel, or any combination.
3. Feasibility: Although it is
recommended that contestants consider
about a 10 year time period for
achieving a proposed goal, NEI
recognizes that estimates of the
timeframe for an audacious goal could
vary considerably depending on the
nature of the goal. Thus, audacious
goals with shorter or longer time periods
may be acceptable. Each entry will be
rated on how well it describes the
technological, scientific, or other
advances that are needed to reach the
goal.
4. Scope: Each entry will be rated on
the extent to which it is broad and/or
far-reaching. Goals can include basic,
translational, clinical research, or any
combination. Goals may also encompass
training or health information
dissemination as appropriate within the
NEI Mission. The goal could have
multiple components, for example
research requiring multidisciplinary
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48163
approaches or involvement of multiple
laboratories. Even a goal that addresses
a disease affecting a relatively small
number of patients may be considered
broad and far-reaching if it requires the
development of tools and techniques
that can be applied to other problems
(see the historical example of Lebers
Congenital Amaurosis in the additional
information section below).
5. Impact: Each entry will be rated on
its transformative potential; its value in
exerting a positive and powerful
influence on the NEI mission.
The evaluation process will begin by
de-identifying the entries and removing
those that are not responsive to this
Challenge or not in compliance with all
Challenge rules. The judges may consult
with technical advisors with relevant
expertise if it is necessary to properly
evaluate entries. Judges and technical
advisors will examine multiple entries
in accord with the aforementioned
judging criteria. The judges will meet to
discuss the most meritorious entries.
Final selection of up to 20 winners will
be determined by a vote of the judges.
Additional Information
NEI is one of 27 institutes and centers
of the National Institutes of Health, a
component of the Department of Health
and Human Services. NEI is the
principal U.S. government agency that
supports vision research, both in its
own labs and in universities and
research facilities throughout the U.S.
and around the world. NEI has the
responsibility of establishing a national
agenda for vision research. Since NEI
was established over 40 years ago, it has
conducted strategic planning activities
culminating in a series of national plans
and workshop reports that identify
needs and opportunities in vision
research. These planning efforts have
relied primarily on the expertise of NEIfunded investigators to review the state
of the science and describe current
specific research needs and
opportunities.
The current NEI strategic planning
effort consists of three phases:
• Phase I: (Completed). Reports of six
NEI-assembled panels of experts in
vision research are compiled in a
document entitled, Vision Research:
Needs, Gaps, and Opportunities
(https://www.nei.nih.gov/
strategicplanning/).
• Phase II: This Challenge to Identify
Audacious Goals in Vision Research
and Blindness Rehabilitation invites
submissions of audacious goals.
Winners of this challenge will present
their goals at the NEI Audacious Goals
Development Meeting of vision research
stakeholders. The NEI and the National
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mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 156 / Monday, August 13, 2012 / Notices
Advisory Eye Council will then select
the most compelling audacious goals for
the national vision research agenda and
to motivate funding agencies in the
United States and worldwide to
stimulate research efforts to address
these goals. The NEI seeks broad and
diverse input not only from vision
researchers and other biomedical and
scientific research communities, but
also more widely from all interested
individuals. Fresh ideas and approaches
are expected to energize research efforts,
increase public awareness of vision
research, and make important
contributions to planning that will
enhance our effort to reduce the burden
of ocular disorders and diseases
worldwide. The creativity arising from a
variety of new perspectives is expected
to generate new research avenues and
approaches.
• Phase III: NEI will develop an
implementation plan that will outline
how the NEI priorities, programs, and
operations will address the needs, gaps
and opportunities identified in Phase I
of the strategic planning process and the
newly identified audacious goals.
The following historical examples are
presented to provide a sense of what is
meant by ‘‘audacious goals.’’ These
were, or would have been big, bold
ideas at that time. Each of these
examples required multiple components
and advances in a variety of areas. The
NEI mission encompasses a variety of
areas including basic and clinical
research, epidemiology, diagnostics,
information dissemination, technology
development, training, and education
and awareness of the special health
problems caused by visual impairment.
We invite audacious goals that
contribute to NEI’s mission.
• An audacious goal in 1997 would
have been to develop gene therapy to
cure an inherited form of childhood
blindness in less than 10 years. The first
genetic mutations causing Lebers
Congenital Amaurosis, a rare form of
inherited childhood blindness, were
identified in 1997. Multiple research
groups then worked on developing gene
therapy to treat this form of LCA,
leading to the start of human clinical
trials in 2007 and reports of success
from three groups in 2008 (https://www.
nei.nih.gov/lca/backgrounder.asp).
• An audacious goal in 1990 would
have been to develop imaging
techniques to view the microscopic
structures of a living human eye to aid
the diagnosis and treatment of disease.
Correcting telescope images for the
blurring from turbulent atmosphere was
first conceived in 1953 and applied
successfully by the late 1980s. The
technology was developed because the
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Department of Defense needed to view
satellites from ground-based telescopes,
but atmospheric turbulence distorted
the images. Similarly, doctors could not
see the microscopic structures in the
back of the eye because their view was
blurred by the optics of the patient’s
eye. The technology developed for
astronomy was modified to view the
back of the eye, and successful use of
this approach allowed visualization of
the main light-sensing cells in retina,
the cone photoreceptors, in 1999 by
Roorda and Williams.
• An audacious goal in 1986 was to
sequence the entire human genome in
15 years.
The Department of Energy and the
National Institutes of Health officially
began the Human Genome Initiative in
1990. Important requirements at the
time included enhancing sequencing
and analytic technologies as well as
computational resources to support
future research and commercial
applications, exploring gene function
through mouse-human comparisons,
studying human variation, and training
future scientists in genomics. This
required multiple approaches, labs, and
expertise. A draft of the human genome
was reported in 2000 and a complete
genome was announced in 2003.
Contacting Challenge Winners and
Displaying Winners’ Information and
Entry
Using information provided in the
Audacious Goal Form, winners will be
notified by email, telephone, or mail
after the judging is completed. Winners’
names, hometown, state, and their
audacious goal description will also be
posted on the Challenge Web site
www.nei.nih.gov/challenge.
Intellectual Property Rights
By participating in this Challenge,
each Contestant grants to NEI an
irrevocable, paid-up, royalty-free,
nonexclusive worldwide license to post,
share, and publicly display the
Contestant’s audacious goal description
on the Web, newsletters or pamphlets,
and other informational products. Each
Contestant understands and agrees that
if his/her entry is selected as a winning
entry, it will be discussed and refined
at the NEI Audacious Goals
Development Meeting early in 2013 and
may ultimately assist NEI in its
prioritization of research goals or
funding for research funding.
General Conditions
NEI reserves the right to cancel,
suspend, and/or modify the
Competition for any reason, at NEI’s
sole discretion.
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Dated: August 8, 2012.
Paul A. Sieving,
Director, National Eye Institute, National
Institutes of Health.
[FR Doc. 2012–19801 Filed 8–10–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
National Institute Environmental Health
Sciences; Notice of Meeting
Pursuant to section 10(d) of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, as
amended (5 U.S.C. App.), notice is
hereby given of a meeting of the
National Advisory Environmental
Health Sciences Council.
The meeting will be open to the
public as indicated below, with
attendance limited to space available.
Individuals who plan to attend and
need special assistance, such as sign
language interpretation or other
reasonable accommodations, should
notify the Contact Person listed below
in advance of the meeting.
The meeting will be closed to the
public in accordance with the
provisions set forth in sections
552b(c)(4) and 552b(c)(6), Title 5 U.S.C.,
as amended. The grant applications and
the discussions could disclose
confidential trade secrets or commercial
property such as patentable material,
and personal information concerning
individuals associated with the grant
applications, the disclosure of which
would constitute a clearly unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy.
Name of Committee: National Advisory
Environmental Health Sciences Council.
Date: September 11, 2012.
Time: 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Agenda: Discussion of program policies
and issues.
Place: Nat. Inst. of Environmental Health
Sciences, Building 101, Rodbell Auditorium,
111 T. W. Alexander Drive, Research
Triangle Park, NC 27709.
Open: 1:15 p.m. to 2:15 p.m.
Agenda: Discussion of program policies
and issues.
Place: Nat. Inst. of Environmental Health
Sciences, Building 101, Rodbell Auditorium,
111 T. W. Alexander Drive, Research
Triangle Park, NC 27709.
Closed: 2:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: Nat. Inst. of Environmental Health
Sciences, Building 101, Rodbell Auditorium,
111 T. W. Alexander Drive, Research
Triangle Park, NC 27709.
Contact Person: Gwen W. Collman, Ph.D.,
Director, Division of Extramural Research &
Training, National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences, National Institutes of
E:\FR\FM\13AUN1.SGM
13AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 156 (Monday, August 13, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 48162-48164]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-19801]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Announcement of Requirements and Registration for the Challenge
To Identify Audacious Goals in Vision Research and Blindness
Rehabilitation
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 3719.
SUMMARY: The National Eye Institute (NEI) is announcing the launch of
the Challenge to Identify Audacious Goals in Vision Research and
Blindness Rehabilitation (Challenge) to stimulate innovation in
establishing a national vision research agenda. This Challenge seeks
entries from the general public, not just those typically engaged in
vision research. The challenge calls for submission of audacious goals
in any area relevant to NEI's mission to conduct and support research,
training, health information dissemination, and other programs with
respect to blinding eye diseases, visual disorders, mechanisms of
visual function, preservation of sight, and the special health problems
and requirements of the blind (42 U.S.C. 285i).
The NEI will select up to 20 winners to receive a $3,000 cash prize
and will host the winners at the NEI Audacious Goals Development
Meeting to present and discuss their winning entries with a broad
audience of scientists, NEI staff, and other stakeholders. This
challenge will generate valuable contributions from NEI's many and
varied stakeholders to inform the Institute's strategic plan, energize
the Institute's research efforts, increase public awareness of vision
research, and enhance the national effort to reduce the burden of
ocular disorders and diseases worldwide.
DATES:
(1) Submission period begins August 13, 2012.
(2) Submission period ends November 12, 2012, 6:00 p.m. ET.
(3) Winners notified January 7, 2013.
(4) Winners present and discuss their winning entry at the NEI
Audacious Goals Development Meeting in early 2013 (date will be
announced on https://www.nei.nih.gov/challenge).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Richard S. Fisher, Ph.D., Associate
Director for Science Policy and Legislation, National Eye Institute,
Phone: 301-496-4308. [NEIPlan@mail.nih.gov.]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Subject of Challenge Competition
This Challenge to Identify Audacious Goals in Vision Research and
Blindness Rehabilitation (Challenge) adds an exciting, unique component
to the NEI's current strategic planning effort. In the past, these
planning efforts relied primarily on the expertise of NEI-funded
scientists to review the state of the science and describe current
specific research needs and opportunities. This Challenge seeks input
from all eligible individuals (Contestants)--not just vision research
scientists--to describe (a) an audacious goal in vision research and
blindness rehabilitation, (b) how to achieve the goal within about 10
years, and (c) the impact of reaching the goal.
Rules for Participating in the Competition
1. Eligibility: To be eligible to win a prize under this Challenge,
a Contestant:
[cir] Shall have registered to participate in the competition under
the rules promulgated by the NEI and explained in this Notice;
[cir] Shall have complied with all the requirements under this
section;
[cir] Shall be an individual at least 18 years of age and shall be
a citizen or permanent resident of the United States;
[cir] May not be a Federal entity or Federal employee acting within
the scope of their employment. Federal employees seeking to participate
in this contest outside the scope of their employment should consult
their ethics official prior to developing their submission;
[cir] May not be employees of the NIH or any other company or
individual involved with the design, production, execution, judging, or
distribution of the Challenge and their immediate family (spouse,
parents and step-parents, siblings and step-siblings, and children and
step-children) and household members (people who share the same
residence at least three (3) months out of the year);
2. Federal grantees may not use Federal funds to develop America
COMPETES Act Challenge applications unless consistent with the purpose
of their grant award (Grantees should consult with their cognizant
Grants Management Official to make this determination); and
3. Federal contractors may not use Federal funds from a contract to
develop a Challenge entry or to fund efforts in support of a Challenge
submission.
4. A Contestant shall not be deemed ineligible because the
individual used Federal facilities or consulted with Federal employees
during a competition if the facilities and employees are made available
to all individuals participating in the competition on an equitable
basis.
5. Liability: By participating in this Challenge, Contestants agree
to assume any and all risks and waive claims against the Federal
Government and its related entities, except in the case of willful
misconduct, for any injury, death, damage, or loss of property,
revenue, or profits, whether direct, indirect, or consequential,
arising from participation in this prize contest, whether the injury,
death, damage, or loss arises through negligence or otherwise.
6. Indemnification: By participating in this Challenge, Contestants
agree to indemnify the Federal Government against third party claims
for damages arising from or related to competition activities.
7. Insurance: Based on the subject matter of the contest, the type
of work that it will possibly require, as well as an analysis of the
likelihood of any claims for death, bodily injury, or property damage,
or loss potentially resulting from contest participation, Contestants
are not required to obtain liability insurance or demonstrate financial
responsibility in order to participate in this contest.
8. By participating in this Challenge, each individual agrees to
abide by all rules set forth in this Notice and the Challenge.gov Terms
of Participation (https://challenge.gov/terms).
9. Each Entry Must:
[cir] Be limited to a maximum of 4,000 characters, including spaces
(roughly a single page). In addition to information requested by https://www.nei.nih.gov/challenge to identify the entry, Contestants must
complete three statements about the proposed audacious goal. The
following statements, which will be the subject of the judging, are:
[ssquf] It would be fantastic if * * *'' (Explain why the goal is
audacious and
[[Page 48163]]
how the goal fits within NEI's mission, which is listed in the
Challenge summary.)
[ssquf] To achieve the audacious goal, * * *'' (Discuss the
feasibility of achieving the goal within about a 10 year period,
including the technological, scientific, or other advances that are
needed to reach the goal.)
[ssquf] If the audacious goal is achieved, the impact would be * *
*''
Note: Examples of what would have been considered audacious goals
in the past can be found at in the ``Additional Information'' section
of this notice.
10. Contestants may submit more than one audacious goal entry, as
long as they are unique.
11. The NEI will not select as a winner an individual who is
currently on the Excluded Parties List (https://www.epls.gov/).
12. Entries must be original works developed solely by the
Contestant and not infringe any intellectual property or any other
rights of any third party.
Process for Registration and Submitting an Entry
For this challenge, registration and submitting an entry are
completed in a single step. Participants can register and submit an
entry for this challenge by following the instructions at the Challenge
to Identify Audacious Goals in Vision Research and Blindness
Rehabilitation Web site: www.nei.nih.gov/challenge.
Amount of the Prize
Up to 20 winners will each be awarded a $3,000 prize and up to
$2,000 in travel reimbursement to participate in the NEI Audacious
Goals Development Meeting in the Washington, DC area in early 2013.
Prizes awarded under this competition will be paid by electronic funds
transfer and may be subject to Federal income taxes. The NEI, one of
the National Institutes of Health, which is a component of the
Department of Health and Human Services, will comply with the Internal
Revenue Service withholding and reporting requirements, where
applicable. Winners will be invited to lead small group discussions on
their submitted goal and understand that the submitted ideas may be
combined with others during the meeting as part of the process to
identify audacious goals. If winners are not present at the meeting,
their entries will still be discussed. Travel expenses to and from the
meeting location, lodging and meals will be separately reimbursed up to
$2,000 and in accordance with Federal Government travel policy. Winners
will need to provide receipts to document travel expenses for
reimbursement purposes in accordance with National Institutes of Health
policy and applicable laws and regulations (https://oma.od.nih.gov/manualchapters/management/1500/).
Basis Upon Which Winners Will Be Selected
The audacious goals entries will be de-identified and then will be
judged by a selection board composed of NIH employees in compliance
with the requirements of the America COMPETES Act and the Department of
Health and Human Services judging guidelines (https://www.hhs.gov/open/initiatives/challenges/judges_guidance.html). Judges will be named
after commencement of the challenge and will consist of senior
scientists and clinicians with knowledge of vision research and ocular
disorders as well as allied biomedical disciplines. The judges will
consult with technical advisors from biomedical, clinical, or other
scientific disciplines if it is necessary to properly evaluate entries.
The judges will make selections based upon the following criteria:
1. Relevance to the NEI Mission: Each entry will be rated on how
the goal would further the NEI mission to conduct and support research,
training, health information dissemination, and other programs with
respect to blinding eye diseases, visual disorders, mechanisms of
visual function, preservation of sight, and the special health problems
and requirements of the blind.
2. Audaciousness: Each entry will be rated on whether the proposed
goal is bold, daring, original or unconventional, exceptionally
innovative, creative, novel, or any combination.
3. Feasibility: Although it is recommended that contestants
consider about a 10 year time period for achieving a proposed goal, NEI
recognizes that estimates of the timeframe for an audacious goal could
vary considerably depending on the nature of the goal. Thus, audacious
goals with shorter or longer time periods may be acceptable. Each entry
will be rated on how well it describes the technological, scientific,
or other advances that are needed to reach the goal.
4. Scope: Each entry will be rated on the extent to which it is
broad and/or far-reaching. Goals can include basic, translational,
clinical research, or any combination. Goals may also encompass
training or health information dissemination as appropriate within the
NEI Mission. The goal could have multiple components, for example
research requiring multidisciplinary approaches or involvement of
multiple laboratories. Even a goal that addresses a disease affecting a
relatively small number of patients may be considered broad and far-
reaching if it requires the development of tools and techniques that
can be applied to other problems (see the historical example of Lebers
Congenital Amaurosis in the additional information section below).
5. Impact: Each entry will be rated on its transformative
potential; its value in exerting a positive and powerful influence on
the NEI mission.
The evaluation process will begin by de-identifying the entries and
removing those that are not responsive to this Challenge or not in
compliance with all Challenge rules. The judges may consult with
technical advisors with relevant expertise if it is necessary to
properly evaluate entries. Judges and technical advisors will examine
multiple entries in accord with the aforementioned judging criteria.
The judges will meet to discuss the most meritorious entries. Final
selection of up to 20 winners will be determined by a vote of the
judges.
Additional Information
NEI is one of 27 institutes and centers of the National Institutes
of Health, a component of the Department of Health and Human Services.
NEI is the principal U.S. government agency that supports vision
research, both in its own labs and in universities and research
facilities throughout the U.S. and around the world. NEI has the
responsibility of establishing a national agenda for vision research.
Since NEI was established over 40 years ago, it has conducted strategic
planning activities culminating in a series of national plans and
workshop reports that identify needs and opportunities in vision
research. These planning efforts have relied primarily on the expertise
of NEI-funded investigators to review the state of the science and
describe current specific research needs and opportunities.
The current NEI strategic planning effort consists of three phases:
Phase I: (Completed). Reports of six NEI-assembled panels
of experts in vision research are compiled in a document entitled,
Vision Research: Needs, Gaps, and Opportunities (https://www.nei.nih.gov/strategicplanning/).
Phase II: This Challenge to Identify Audacious Goals in
Vision Research and Blindness Rehabilitation invites submissions of
audacious goals. Winners of this challenge will present their goals at
the NEI Audacious Goals Development Meeting of vision research
stakeholders. The NEI and the National
[[Page 48164]]
Advisory Eye Council will then select the most compelling audacious
goals for the national vision research agenda and to motivate funding
agencies in the United States and worldwide to stimulate research
efforts to address these goals. The NEI seeks broad and diverse input
not only from vision researchers and other biomedical and scientific
research communities, but also more widely from all interested
individuals. Fresh ideas and approaches are expected to energize
research efforts, increase public awareness of vision research, and
make important contributions to planning that will enhance our effort
to reduce the burden of ocular disorders and diseases worldwide. The
creativity arising from a variety of new perspectives is expected to
generate new research avenues and approaches.
Phase III: NEI will develop an implementation plan that
will outline how the NEI priorities, programs, and operations will
address the needs, gaps and opportunities identified in Phase I of the
strategic planning process and the newly identified audacious goals.
The following historical examples are presented to provide a sense
of what is meant by ``audacious goals.'' These were, or would have been
big, bold ideas at that time. Each of these examples required multiple
components and advances in a variety of areas. The NEI mission
encompasses a variety of areas including basic and clinical research,
epidemiology, diagnostics, information dissemination, technology
development, training, and education and awareness of the special
health problems caused by visual impairment. We invite audacious goals
that contribute to NEI's mission.
An audacious goal in 1997 would have been to develop gene
therapy to cure an inherited form of childhood blindness in less than
10 years. The first genetic mutations causing Lebers Congenital
Amaurosis, a rare form of inherited childhood blindness, were
identified in 1997. Multiple research groups then worked on developing
gene therapy to treat this form of LCA, leading to the start of human
clinical trials in 2007 and reports of success from three groups in
2008 (https://www.nei.nih.gov/lca/backgrounder.asp).
An audacious goal in 1990 would have been to develop
imaging techniques to view the microscopic structures of a living human
eye to aid the diagnosis and treatment of disease.
Correcting telescope images for the blurring from turbulent
atmosphere was first conceived in 1953 and applied successfully by the
late 1980s. The technology was developed because the Department of
Defense needed to view satellites from ground-based telescopes, but
atmospheric turbulence distorted the images. Similarly, doctors could
not see the microscopic structures in the back of the eye because their
view was blurred by the optics of the patient's eye. The technology
developed for astronomy was modified to view the back of the eye, and
successful use of this approach allowed visualization of the main
light-sensing cells in retina, the cone photoreceptors, in 1999 by
Roorda and Williams.
An audacious goal in 1986 was to sequence the entire human
genome in 15 years.
The Department of Energy and the National Institutes of Health
officially began the Human Genome Initiative in 1990. Important
requirements at the time included enhancing sequencing and analytic
technologies as well as computational resources to support future
research and commercial applications, exploring gene function through
mouse-human comparisons, studying human variation, and training future
scientists in genomics. This required multiple approaches, labs, and
expertise. A draft of the human genome was reported in 2000 and a
complete genome was announced in 2003.
Contacting Challenge Winners and Displaying Winners' Information and
Entry
Using information provided in the Audacious Goal Form, winners will
be notified by email, telephone, or mail after the judging is
completed. Winners' names, hometown, state, and their audacious goal
description will also be posted on the Challenge Web site
www.nei.nih.gov/challenge.
Intellectual Property Rights
By participating in this Challenge, each Contestant grants to NEI
an irrevocable, paid-up, royalty-free, nonexclusive worldwide license
to post, share, and publicly display the Contestant's audacious goal
description on the Web, newsletters or pamphlets, and other
informational products. Each Contestant understands and agrees that if
his/her entry is selected as a winning entry, it will be discussed and
refined at the NEI Audacious Goals Development Meeting early in 2013
and may ultimately assist NEI in its prioritization of research goals
or funding for research funding.
General Conditions
NEI reserves the right to cancel, suspend, and/or modify the
Competition for any reason, at NEI's sole discretion.
Dated: August 8, 2012.
Paul A. Sieving,
Director, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health.
[FR Doc. 2012-19801 Filed 8-10-12; 8:45 am]
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