Announcement of Requirements and Registration for the Open Science Prize, 63567-63570 [2015-26392]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 202 / Tuesday, October 20, 2015 / Notices
The meetings 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 Human
Genome Research Institute Special Emphasis
Panel; Diversity Action Plan (DAP).
Date: November 9, 2015.
Time: 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Human Genome Research
Institute, 3rd Floor Conference Room, 5635
Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD 20852,
(Telephone Conference Call).
Contact Person: Keith McKenney, Ph.D.,
Scientific Review Officer, NHGRI, 5635
Fishers Lane, Suite 4076, Bethesda, MD
20814, 301–594–4280.
Name of Committee: National Human
Genome Research Institute Special Emphasis
Panel; High Quality Genome Sequences.
Date: November 19, 2015.
Time: 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Human Genome Research
Institute, 3rd Floor Conference Room, 5635
Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD 20852,
(Telephone Conference Call).
Contact Person: Lita Proctor, Ph.D.,
Extramural Research Programs Staff, Program
Director, Human Microbiome Project,
National Human Genome Research Institute,
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(Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance
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Dated: October 14, 2015.
Melanie J. Gray,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
[FR Doc. 2015–26559 Filed 10–19–15; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
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National Institutes of Health
Announcement of Requirements and
Registration for the Open Science
Prize
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 3719
Award Approving Official: Philip E.
Bourne, Associate Director, NIH OD.
SUMMARY: The National Institutes of
Health (NIH) Office of the Associate
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Director for Data Science (ADDS)
announces a collaboration with the
Wellcome Trust (WT) and the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) to
launch the ‘‘Open Science Prize’’ (the
‘‘Challenge’’) to encourage and support
the prototyping and development of
services, tools and/or platforms that
enable open content—including
publications, datasets, code and other
research outputs—to be discovered,
accessed and re-used in ways that will
advance research, spark innovation, and
generate new societal benefits. The
Challenge is necessary to accelerate the
field of ‘‘open’’ biomedical research
beyond what current funding
mechanisms can achieve. For the NIH,
this Challenge is being launched under
the America COMPETES
Reauthorization Act of 2010.
DATES:
February 29, 2016: Phase I
submissions due
April 30, 2016: Announce Phase I
winners; Phase II begins
December 1, 2016: Phase II
submissions due
February 28, 2017: Phase II winner
announced
The NIH will announce any changes
to the timeline by amending this
Federal Register notice.
ADDRESSES: To register for this
Challenge, Challenge participants may
access the registration on the Challenge
Web site (www.openscienceprize.org).
Access to this Web site may also be
found by searching the
www.challenge.gov site for the ‘‘Open
Science Prize.’’
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Audie A. Atienza, Ph.D. (NIH),
Audie.Atienza@nih.gov; Vinay Pai,
Ph.D. (NIH), paiv@mail.nih.gov; David
Carr (Wellcome Trust), d.carr@
wellcome.ac.uk.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Subject of Challenge
In order to stimulate innovation, the
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Office of the Associate Director for Data
Science (ADDS), in conjunction with
Challenge Partners, the Wellcome Trust
(WT) and the Howard Hughes Medical
Institute (HHMI), is launching the
‘‘Open Science Prize’’ (the ‘‘Challenge’’);
a prize competition to inspire the
prototyping and development of
services, tools, or platforms that enable
open content—including publications,
datasets, code and other research
outputs—to be discovered, accessed and
re-used in ways that will advance
research, spark innovation and generate
new societal benefits. The NIH is using
the America Creating Opportunities to
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Meaningfully Promote Excellence in
Technology, Education, and Science
(COMPETES) Reauthorization Act of
2010 to support this Challenge.
The goal of this Challenge is to
stimulate the development of novel and
ground-breaking tools and platforms to
enable the reuse and repurposing of
open digital research objects (e.g. data,
publications, other research outputs)
relevant to biomedical or health
applications. The volume of digital
objects for research available to
researchers and the wider public is
greater now than ever before, and so,
consequently, are the opportunities to
mine and extract value from existing
open content and to generate new
discoveries and other societal benefits.
A key obstacle in realizing these
benefits is the discoverability of open
content, and the ability to access and
utilize it.
This Challenge provides a new and
innovative avenue for developing the
best ideas in this arena. Through the
Challenge, the NIH, WT, and HHMI
hope to encourage novel ideas and
innovations that seek to unlock the vast
potential benefits of making biomedical/
health content and data open and reuseable, to demonstrate the huge
potential value of open science
approaches, and to generate excitement,
momentum, and further investment.
This Challenge also encourages
international collaborations among
technology innovators, health
researchers, and biomedical informatics
entities to address ‘‘Open Science’’
development. In building partnerships
between innovators in the U.S. and
abroad, unique resources can be
combined and leveraged to facilitate
global health research objectives
relevant to the mission of the NIH,
increase rapid adoption of Open Science
research tools across the globe, and
enhance the generalizability of data
sharing among researchers and
practitioners internationally.
The NIH, WT, and HHMI are seeking
to utilize the developer challenge model
in the area of ‘‘Open Science’’ that is as
open, flexible, and interactive as
possible, so as to encourage the
development of new collaborations as
well as new ideas. Solvers are invited to
use innovative approaches to develop
applications and platforms that
integrate, repurpose and/or repackage
open digital resources relevant to health
and biomedical research. The Challenge
is open both to those who have new
ideas and require some funding to take
it to the prototype stage, and those with
initial early-stage prototypes who wish
to develop them further for crossnational or international adoption.
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 202 / Tuesday, October 20, 2015 / Notices
There will be two (2) phases to this
Challenge. For Phase I, Solvers will
submit written proposals for prototype
designs and development plans to
enable the reuse and repurposing of
open digital research objects relevant to
biomedical or health applications. For
Phase II, Solvers (i.e., Phase I finalists)
will submit their prototypes.
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Statutory Authority
Pursuant to Section 402 of the Public
Health Service Act, 42 U.S.C. 282(b)(12),
the NIH is authorized to reserve funds
to provide for research on matters that
have not received significant funding
relative to other matters, to respond to
new issues and scientific emergencies,
and to act on research opportunities of
high priority. The Open Science Prize is
designed to incentivize innovation at
the intersection of Open Science (i.e.,
making scientific data and research
outputs available and accessible to all
levels of society) and Data Science (i.e.,
developing and utilizing research
methods and designs that optimize the
exploration and analysis of complex
and/or large data sets; biomedical data
in this case). Open Science and Data
Science are two emerging fields within
biomedical research and represent
research opportunities of high priority
within the NIH.
Official Rules
1. To Participate. This Challenge is
open to any ‘‘Solver’’ where ‘‘Solver’’ is
defined as (a) a group of individuals
where at least one individual is a citizen
or permanent resident of the United
States, and at least one individual is
citizen or permanent resident from a
country other than the United States; or
(b) a group of two or more public or
private entities where at least one entity
is incorporated in and maintains a
primary place of business in the United
States, and at least one entity is
incorporated in and maintains a primary
place of business in a country other than
the United States. Phase II of this
Challenge is open to Phase I winners
only. Individuals participating in the
Challenge who are younger than 18
years of age, whether as part of a team
of individuals or a team of entities, must
have their parent or legal guardian
complete the Parental Consent Form
found at www.openscienceprize.org.
2. Eligibility Rules for Winning the
Challenge. To be eligible to win a prize
for this Challenge, the Solver and its
members, as applicable, shall have
complied with all the Official Rules.
3. In addition to satisfying the above
eligibility requirements—
a. The Solver shall have registered to
participate in the Challenge under the
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rules promulgated by the sponsoring
organizations (NIH, WT, HHMI) (as
published in this notice);
b. The Solver shall have complied
with all the requirements under this
section;
c. The Solver, including each entity
member, may not be a U.S. federal
entity;
d. The Solver, including each
individual member, may not be a U.S.
federal employee acting within the
scope of his or her employment and
further, in the case of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human
Services employees may not work on
their Entries during assigned duty
hours. Note: Federal ethical conduct
rules may restrict or prohibit U.S.
federal employees from engaging in
certain outside activities, so any federal
employee not excluded under the prior
paragraph seeking to participate in this
Challenge outside the scope of
employment should consult his/her
agency’s ethics official prior to
developing an Entry; and
e. The Solver, including each
individual member, may not be an
employee of the NIH, a judge of the
Challenge, or any other party involved
with the design, production, execution,
or distribution of the Challenge or the
immediate family member of such a
party (i.e., spouse, parent, step-parent,
or step-child). Without limiting the
generality of the foregoing, Expert
Science Advisors who will provide
comments on the entries and the NIH
Judges, as well as their students, are not
eligible to participate in the Challenge.
f. Note on Awards: Monetary prizes
provided by the WT and HHMI for the
Challenge will be awarded separately
from the NIH monetary prizes.
i. NIH monetary prizes: In the case of
individuals participating on a team of
individuals, only individuals who are
citizens or permanent residents of the
United States are eligible for the NIH
monetary prizes. Individuals who are
not citizens or permanent residents of
the United States can participate as a
member of a team that otherwise
satisfies the eligibility criteria but will
not be eligible to win an NIH monetary
prize (in whole or in part); however,
their participation as part of a winning
team, if applicable, may be recognized
by the NIH when results are announced.
In the case of private entities
participating on a team of entities, only
entities incorporated in and maintaining
a primary place of business in the
United States are eligible for the NIH
monetary prizes. Private entities that are
not incorporated in and do not maintain
a primary place of business in the
United States will not be eligible to win
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an NIH monetary prize (in whole or in
part); however, should such an entity
collaborate with a winning, and
otherwise eligible, team such an entity
may be recognized by the NIH when
results are announced.
ii. WT/HHMI monetary prizes. U.S.
citizenship/residency (for individuals)
or U.S. incorporation/place of business
(for entities) is not a requirement to be
eligible for the monetary prizes awarded
by WT/HHMI.
4. Federal grantees may not use
federal funds (e.g., NIH grants) to
develop Challenge Entries unless
consistent with the purpose of their
grant award and specifically requested
to do so due to the Challenge design,
and as announced in the Federal
Register.
5. Federal contractors may not use
federal funds from a contract (e.g., NIH
contract) to develop Challenge Entries
or to fund efforts in support of a
Challenge Entry.
6. Any Solver that is or has a member
currently on the Excluded Parties List
(https://www.sam.gov/sam/transcript/
Public_-_Identifying_Excluded_
Entities.pdf & https://www.epa.gov/isdc/
exclude.htm) will not be selected as a
prize winner.
7. Entries must not infringe upon any
copyright or any other rights of any
third party.
8. A Solver shall not be deemed
ineligible to win because the Solver
used U.S. federal facilities or consulted
with U.S. federal employees during the
Challenge, provided that such facilities
and/or employees, as applicable, are
made available on an equitable basis to
all Solvers participating in the
Challenge.
9. Each Solver agrees to follow
applicable local, state, and federal laws,
regulations, and policies.
10. Each Solver must comply with all
terms and conditions of these rules, and
participation in this Challenge
constitutes each such Solver’s full and
unconditional agreement to abide by
these rules, which may also be found on
the Challenge Web site
(www.openscienceprize.org). Winning is
contingent upon fulfilling all
requirements herein.
11. The NIH reserves the right, in its
sole discretion, to (a) cancel, suspend,
or modify the Challenge, and/or (b) not
award prizes if no Entries are deemed
worthy.
All questions regarding the Challenge
should be directed to Dr. Atienza, Dr.
Pai, or Mr. Carr identified above, and
answers will be posted and updated as
necessary at
(www.openscienceprize.org) under
Frequently Asked Questions.
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Registration Process for Participants
To register for this Challenge, Solvers
may access the registration on the
Challenge Web site
(www.openscienceprize.org). Access to
this Web site may also be found by
searching the www.challenge.gov site for
the ‘‘Open Science Prize’’. As described
above in the eligibility section of the
Official Rules, Solvers must establish an
international collaborative team;
specifically, either (a) a team of two or
more individuals where at least one
individual is a citizen or permanent
resident of the United States, and at
least one individual is citizen or
permanent resident from a country other
than the United States; or (b) a group of
two or more public or private entities
where at least one entity is incorporated
in and maintains a primary place of
business in the United States, and at
least one entity is incorporated in and
maintains a primary place of business in
a country other than the United States.
Additional details about participating as
a team are provided below:
1. Each team must have two team
leaders; one from the U.S. and one from
outside of the U.S.
2. All members of the team need to be
listed during registration.
3. There is no maximum team size.
Challenge Entries
As used in this notice, ‘‘Entry’’ is the
information submitted in the manner
and format specified on the ‘‘Open
Science Prize’’ Web site
(www.openscienceprize.org) including
without limitation computer programs,
source code and object code. All Entries
must be received by the applicable
deadline. Entries submitted after a
posted Challenge deadline will not be
considered.
Entries may be submitted on behalf of
a team by any of its members. It is up
to each team to organize its Entry(ies)
and to follow the Challenge submission
requirements. On submission of an
Entry of the Challenge, the Solver must
include the team name under which the
Entry is submitted.
All final Entries must be submitted
through the Challenge Web site,
following Web site instructions and
should provide necessary and sufficient
detail and annotation for reproduction
of the submitted results.
Information accompanying each
Phase I Entry should include:
1. Title of project.
2. Name of team.
3. Names, field of expertise and
residency of the Solver’s team
members.
4. A written proposal describing the
solution, no longer than 15,000
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characters (not including spaces).
This should include: An executive
summary of 300 words maximum;
identification of open content to be
used; and a description of if, how,
and under what license terms the
team intends to make any of the
computer code that is part of the
Entry available to the public. Note:
Executive summaries for all
applications will be shared via the
prize Web site without exception
and licensed under the Creative
Commons Attribution 4.0 License
(CC BY 4.0), so applicants should
not include proprietary information
in their summary or any other
information they are not prepared
to be openly available.
5. Link to a Web presence of the
proposed solution.
6. Information about how the Solver
learned about the Challenge.
Information accompanying each
Phase II Entry should include:
1. Title of project.
2. Name of team.
3. Names, field of expertise and
residency of Solver’s team
members.
4. Description/specification of the
prototype developed and potential
future impact of the prototype, no
longer than 15,000 characters (not
including spaces).
5. Link to a Web presence of the
prototype.
6. Web site URL to access the prototype
and relevant instructions (1 page).
Only complete Entries, which follow
application instructions, will be
reviewed and eligible to win. The NIH
and Challenge Partners reserve the right
to disqualify any Challenge participants
in instances where cheating or other
misconduct is identified. Details
regarding the dispute resolution process
are provided on the Challenge Web site
(www.openscienceprize.org).
Warranties
By submitting an Entry to the
Challenge, each Solver represents and
warrants that all information provided
in the Entry and as a result of the
Challenge registration process is true
and complete, that Solver has the right
and authority to submit such Entry on
the Solver’s own behalf or on behalf of
the persons and entities specified
within the Entry, and that the Entry:
1. Is the Solver’s own original work, or
is used by permission with full and
proper credit given within the
Entry;
2. Does not contain confidential
information or trade secrets (the
Solver’s or anyone else’s);
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3. Does not violate or infringe upon the
patent rights, industrial design
rights, copyrights, trademarks,
rights of privacy, publicity or other
intellectual property or other rights
of any person or entity;
4. Does not contain malicious code,
such as viruses, timebombs,
cancelbots, worms, trojan horses or
other potentially harmful programs
or other material or information;
5. Does not and will not violate any
applicable law, statute, or
regulation; and
6. Does not trigger any reporting or
royalty obligation to any third
party.
Amount of the Prize
During Phase I, up to six (6) winners
may be identified. The NIH may award
up to three (3) winning teams monetary
prizes of $80,000 per team. The WT/
HHMI may award up to three (3)
winning teams monetary prizes of
$80,000 per team.
During Phase II, one (1) Entry will be
awarded a grand prize of up to
$230,000. The NIH will award $115,000
to the U.S. member(s) of the winning
team, and the WT/HHMI will award
$115,000 to the winning team. For the
NIH awards, prizes will be awarded by
the NIH Contractor, Capital Consulting
Corporation.
The top 6 Entries (grand prize winner
and the 5 runner-ups) may be
highlighted on the Challenge and the
NIH ADDS Web sites pending selection
by the NIH.
The NIH reserves the right to cancel,
suspend, and/or modify this Challenge
at any time through amendment to this
Federal Register notice. In the event the
Challenge is modified, Solvers
registered in the Challenge will be
notified by email and provided with a
copy of the amended Challenge rules
and a listing of the changes that were
made. Any Solver who continues to
participate in the Challenge following
receipt of such a notice of
amendment(s), will be deemed to have
accepted any such amendment(s). If a
Solver does not wish to continue to
participate in the Challenge pursuant to
the Official Rules, as amended, such
Solver may terminate participation in
the Challenge by not submitting
additional Entries. The NIH reserves the
right to not award prizes if no Entries
are deemed worthy.
Basis Upon Which Winner Will Be
Selected
Entries will be scored by the
Challenge Judges using the criteria
listed below.
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• Advancement of Open Science—To
what extent does the proposal/prototype
advance the goals of open science in
biomedical/health research, and fulfill
the goals of openness in terms of the
product and way of working? To what
extent would it move the field forward?
• Impact—What level of impact and
benefit could the proposal—if
successful—deliver to the research
enterprise and health research? Does the
proposal/prototype address
implementation in multiple settings in a
cross-national manner?
• Innovation—What level of
creativity and technological innovation
does the entrant demonstrate?
• Originality—Is the technology or
service genuinely novel and targeting an
unmet need? Has the applicant
evaluated other existing or alternative
approaches, or delineated their
approach in comparison to existing
approaches (if applicable)?
• Technological viability—Is the
approach proposed viable? Can the
proposed technology deliver?
• Resource feasibility—Does the team
have the required skills and resources?
Judges will rate each entry on fivepoint scale from Not-fundable (1) to
Outstanding (5). The NIH and WT will
hold separate judging panels, and then
will discuss priorities for selection of
the respective winners (in Phase I), and
the final winner (in Phase II).
For Phase II, public voting will select
the top 3 prototypes of the 6 Phase I
finalist, followed by a review of the
prototypes for feasibility and technical
merit by external advisors with
expertise in Open Science. Prototypes
will then be scored by Judges using the
initial Phase I criteria.
Intellectual Property
By submitting an Entry, each Solver
warrants that he or she is the sole author
and owner of any copyrightable works
that the Entry comprises (or has
obtained sufficient rights in any
copyrightable works owned by third
parties to satisfy its obligations set forth
herein), that the works are wholly
original with the Solver (or is an
improved version of an existing work
that the Solver has sufficient rights to
use and improve), and that the Entry
does not infringe any copyright or any
other rights of any third party of which
Solver is aware.
To receive an award, Solvers will not
be required to transfer their intellectual
property rights to the NIH or the
Challenge Partners. Each Solver retains
title to their Entry, including object and
source code, and expressly reserves all
intellectual property rights (e.g.,
copyrights and rights to inventions and
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patents that cover them) in their Entry,
unless the Solver chooses an open
license for the Entry. By participating in
the Challenge each Solver grants to the
U.S. government a nonexclusive, nontransferrable, irrevocable, paid-up
license to practice or have practiced for
or on behalf of the United States any
invention throughout the world owned
or controlled by the Solver that covers
the Entry, and grants to the U.S.
government and others acting on behalf
of the U.S. government, a royalty-free,
irrevocable, non-exclusive worldwide
license to use, reproduce, and display
publicly all parts of the Entry for the
purposes of the Challenge. This license
includes without limitation posting or
linking to the Entry on the official
Challenge Web site and, except for
object code or source code, making the
Entry available for research use by the
public. Notwithstanding the above and
consistent with the principal objective
of the challenge to make results widely
available to the public, the NIH
encourages the Solver to distribute any
computer code (object code and
preferably also source code) that is part
of the Entry to the public under a liberal
open source license that permits the
public to benefit from and improve
upon the Entry (see the licenses
available at https://opensource.org/
licenses/). The Solver should include in
its submission a description of how and
under what license terms it intends to
make any computer code that is part of
the Entry available to the public.
Solvers are free to discuss their Entry
and the ideas or technologies that it
contains with other parties, encouraged
to share ideas/technologies publicly,
and are free to contract with any third
parties, as long as they do not sign any
agreement or undertake any obligation
that conflicts with the Challenge rules
set forth herein. For the purpose of
clarity, Solvers acknowledge that the
intent of the Challenge is to encourage
people to collaborate and share ideas
and innovations.
Liability and Indemnification
By participating in this Challenge,
each Solver agrees to assume any and all
risks and waive claims against the U.S.
federal government and its related
entities (as defined in the COMPETES
Act), including Capital Consulting
Corporation, the Challenge Expert
Science Advisors and Judges, 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 Challenge,
whether the injury, death, damage, or
loss arises through negligence or
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otherwise. By participating in this
Challenge, each Solver agrees to
indemnify the federal government and
the Capital Consulting Corporation
against third party claims for damages
arising from or related to Challenge
activities.
Insurance
Based on the subject matter of the
Challenge, 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
competition participation, Solvers are
not required to obtain liability insurance
or demonstrate financial responsibility
in order to participate in this Challenge.
Dated: September 28, 2015.
Lawrence A. Tabak,
Deputy Director, National Institutes of Health.
[FR Doc. 2015–26392 Filed 10–19–15; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Arthritis and
Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases;
Notice of Closed Meetings
Pursuant to section 10(d) of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, as
amended (5 U.S.C. App.), notice is
hereby given of the following meetings.
The meetings 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 Institute of
Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin
Diseases Special Emphasis Panel.
Date: November 3, 2015.
Time: 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institutes of Health, 6701
Democracy Blvd., Bethesda, MD 20892,
(Virtual Meeting).
Contact Person: Yin Liu, Ph.D., MD,
Scientific Review Officer Scientific Review
Branch National Institute of Arthritis, and
Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, National
Institute of Health Bethesda, MD 20892, 301–
496–0505, liuy@mail.nih.gov.
Name of Committee: National Institute of
Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin
Diseases Special Emphasis Panel.
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20OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 202 (Tuesday, October 20, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 63567-63570]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-26392]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Announcement of Requirements and Registration for the Open
Science Prize
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 3719
Award Approving Official: Philip E. Bourne, Associate Director, NIH
OD.
SUMMARY: The National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of the
Associate Director for Data Science (ADDS) announces a collaboration
with the Wellcome Trust (WT) and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute
(HHMI) to launch the ``Open Science Prize'' (the ``Challenge'') to
encourage and support the prototyping and development of services,
tools and/or platforms that enable open content--including
publications, datasets, code and other research outputs--to be
discovered, accessed and re-used in ways that will advance research,
spark innovation, and generate new societal benefits. The Challenge is
necessary to accelerate the field of ``open'' biomedical research
beyond what current funding mechanisms can achieve. For the NIH, this
Challenge is being launched under the America COMPETES Reauthorization
Act of 2010.
DATES:
February 29, 2016: Phase I submissions due
April 30, 2016: Announce Phase I winners; Phase II begins
December 1, 2016: Phase II submissions due
February 28, 2017: Phase II winner announced
The NIH will announce any changes to the timeline by amending this
Federal Register notice.
ADDRESSES: To register for this Challenge, Challenge participants may
access the registration on the Challenge Web site
(www.openscienceprize.org). Access to this Web site may also be found
by searching the www.challenge.gov site for the ``Open Science Prize.''
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Audie A. Atienza, Ph.D. (NIH),
Audie.Atienza@nih.gov; Vinay Pai, Ph.D. (NIH), paiv@mail.nih.gov; David
Carr (Wellcome Trust), d.carr@wellcome.ac.uk.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Subject of Challenge
In order to stimulate innovation, the National Institutes of Health
(NIH) Office of the Associate Director for Data Science (ADDS), in
conjunction with Challenge Partners, the Wellcome Trust (WT) and the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), is launching the ``Open Science
Prize'' (the ``Challenge''); a prize competition to inspire the
prototyping and development of services, tools, or platforms that
enable open content--including publications, datasets, code and other
research outputs--to be discovered, accessed and re-used in ways that
will advance research, spark innovation and generate new societal
benefits. The NIH is using the America Creating Opportunities to
Meaningfully Promote Excellence in Technology, Education, and Science
(COMPETES) Reauthorization Act of 2010 to support this Challenge.
The goal of this Challenge is to stimulate the development of novel
and ground-breaking tools and platforms to enable the reuse and
repurposing of open digital research objects (e.g. data, publications,
other research outputs) relevant to biomedical or health applications.
The volume of digital objects for research available to researchers and
the wider public is greater now than ever before, and so, consequently,
are the opportunities to mine and extract value from existing open
content and to generate new discoveries and other societal benefits. A
key obstacle in realizing these benefits is the discoverability of open
content, and the ability to access and utilize it.
This Challenge provides a new and innovative avenue for developing
the best ideas in this arena. Through the Challenge, the NIH, WT, and
HHMI hope to encourage novel ideas and innovations that seek to unlock
the vast potential benefits of making biomedical/health content and
data open and re-useable, to demonstrate the huge potential value of
open science approaches, and to generate excitement, momentum, and
further investment. This Challenge also encourages international
collaborations among technology innovators, health researchers, and
biomedical informatics entities to address ``Open Science''
development. In building partnerships between innovators in the U.S.
and abroad, unique resources can be combined and leveraged to
facilitate global health research objectives relevant to the mission of
the NIH, increase rapid adoption of Open Science research tools across
the globe, and enhance the generalizability of data sharing among
researchers and practitioners internationally.
The NIH, WT, and HHMI are seeking to utilize the developer
challenge model in the area of ``Open Science'' that is as open,
flexible, and interactive as possible, so as to encourage the
development of new collaborations as well as new ideas. Solvers are
invited to use innovative approaches to develop applications and
platforms that integrate, repurpose and/or repackage open digital
resources relevant to health and biomedical research. The Challenge is
open both to those who have new ideas and require some funding to take
it to the prototype stage, and those with initial early-stage
prototypes who wish to develop them further for cross-national or
international adoption.
[[Page 63568]]
There will be two (2) phases to this Challenge. For Phase I,
Solvers will submit written proposals for prototype designs and
development plans to enable the reuse and repurposing of open digital
research objects relevant to biomedical or health applications. For
Phase II, Solvers (i.e., Phase I finalists) will submit their
prototypes.
Statutory Authority
Pursuant to Section 402 of the Public Health Service Act, 42 U.S.C.
282(b)(12), the NIH is authorized to reserve funds to provide for
research on matters that have not received significant funding relative
to other matters, to respond to new issues and scientific emergencies,
and to act on research opportunities of high priority. The Open Science
Prize is designed to incentivize innovation at the intersection of Open
Science (i.e., making scientific data and research outputs available
and accessible to all levels of society) and Data Science (i.e.,
developing and utilizing research methods and designs that optimize the
exploration and analysis of complex and/or large data sets; biomedical
data in this case). Open Science and Data Science are two emerging
fields within biomedical research and represent research opportunities
of high priority within the NIH.
Official Rules
1. To Participate. This Challenge is open to any ``Solver'' where
``Solver'' is defined as (a) a group of individuals where at least one
individual is a citizen or permanent resident of the United States, and
at least one individual is citizen or permanent resident from a country
other than the United States; or (b) a group of two or more public or
private entities where at least one entity is incorporated in and
maintains a primary place of business in the United States, and at
least one entity is incorporated in and maintains a primary place of
business in a country other than the United States. Phase II of this
Challenge is open to Phase I winners only. Individuals participating in
the Challenge who are younger than 18 years of age, whether as part of
a team of individuals or a team of entities, must have their parent or
legal guardian complete the Parental Consent Form found at
www.openscienceprize.org.
2. Eligibility Rules for Winning the Challenge. To be eligible to
win a prize for this Challenge, the Solver and its members, as
applicable, shall have complied with all the Official Rules.
3. In addition to satisfying the above eligibility requirements--
a. The Solver shall have registered to participate in the Challenge
under the rules promulgated by the sponsoring organizations (NIH, WT,
HHMI) (as published in this notice);
b. The Solver shall have complied with all the requirements under
this section;
c. The Solver, including each entity member, may not be a U.S.
federal entity;
d. The Solver, including each individual member, may not be a U.S.
federal employee acting within the scope of his or her employment and
further, in the case of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services employees may not work on their Entries during assigned duty
hours. Note: Federal ethical conduct rules may restrict or prohibit
U.S. federal employees from engaging in certain outside activities, so
any federal employee not excluded under the prior paragraph seeking to
participate in this Challenge outside the scope of employment should
consult his/her agency's ethics official prior to developing an Entry;
and
e. The Solver, including each individual member, may not be an
employee of the NIH, a judge of the Challenge, or any other party
involved with the design, production, execution, or distribution of the
Challenge or the immediate family member of such a party (i.e., spouse,
parent, step-parent, or step-child). Without limiting the generality of
the foregoing, Expert Science Advisors who will provide comments on the
entries and the NIH Judges, as well as their students, are not eligible
to participate in the Challenge.
f. Note on Awards: Monetary prizes provided by the WT and HHMI for
the Challenge will be awarded separately from the NIH monetary prizes.
i. NIH monetary prizes: In the case of individuals participating on
a team of individuals, only individuals who are citizens or permanent
residents of the United States are eligible for the NIH monetary
prizes. Individuals who are not citizens or permanent residents of the
United States can participate as a member of a team that otherwise
satisfies the eligibility criteria but will not be eligible to win an
NIH monetary prize (in whole or in part); however, their participation
as part of a winning team, if applicable, may be recognized by the NIH
when results are announced. In the case of private entities
participating on a team of entities, only entities incorporated in and
maintaining a primary place of business in the United States are
eligible for the NIH monetary prizes. Private entities that are not
incorporated in and do not maintain a primary place of business in the
United States will not be eligible to win an NIH monetary prize (in
whole or in part); however, should such an entity collaborate with a
winning, and otherwise eligible, team such an entity may be recognized
by the NIH when results are announced.
ii. WT/HHMI monetary prizes. U.S. citizenship/residency (for
individuals) or U.S. incorporation/place of business (for entities) is
not a requirement to be eligible for the monetary prizes awarded by WT/
HHMI.
4. Federal grantees may not use federal funds (e.g., NIH grants) to
develop Challenge Entries unless consistent with the purpose of their
grant award and specifically requested to do so due to the Challenge
design, and as announced in the Federal Register.
5. Federal contractors may not use federal funds from a contract
(e.g., NIH contract) to develop Challenge Entries or to fund efforts in
support of a Challenge Entry.
6. Any Solver that is or has a member currently on the Excluded
Parties List (https://www.sam.gov/sam/transcript/Public_-_Identifying_Excluded_Entities.pdf & https://www.epa.gov/isdc/exclude.htm) will not be selected as a prize winner.
7. Entries must not infringe upon any copyright or any other rights
of any third party.
8. A Solver shall not be deemed ineligible to win because the
Solver used U.S. federal facilities or consulted with U.S. federal
employees during the Challenge, provided that such facilities and/or
employees, as applicable, are made available on an equitable basis to
all Solvers participating in the Challenge.
9. Each Solver agrees to follow applicable local, state, and
federal laws, regulations, and policies.
10. Each Solver must comply with all terms and conditions of these
rules, and participation in this Challenge constitutes each such
Solver's full and unconditional agreement to abide by these rules,
which may also be found on the Challenge Web site
(www.openscienceprize.org). Winning is contingent upon fulfilling all
requirements herein.
11. The NIH reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to (a)
cancel, suspend, or modify the Challenge, and/or (b) not award prizes
if no Entries are deemed worthy.
All questions regarding the Challenge should be directed to Dr.
Atienza, Dr. Pai, or Mr. Carr identified above, and answers will be
posted and updated as necessary at (www.openscienceprize.org) under
Frequently Asked Questions.
[[Page 63569]]
Registration Process for Participants
To register for this Challenge, Solvers may access the registration
on the Challenge Web site (www.openscienceprize.org). Access to this
Web site may also be found by searching the www.challenge.gov site for
the ``Open Science Prize''. As described above in the eligibility
section of the Official Rules, Solvers must establish an international
collaborative team; specifically, either (a) a team of two or more
individuals where at least one individual is a citizen or permanent
resident of the United States, and at least one individual is citizen
or permanent resident from a country other than the United States; or
(b) a group of two or more public or private entities where at least
one entity is incorporated in and maintains a primary place of business
in the United States, and at least one entity is incorporated in and
maintains a primary place of business in a country other than the
United States. Additional details about participating as a team are
provided below:
1. Each team must have two team leaders; one from the U.S. and one
from outside of the U.S.
2. All members of the team need to be listed during registration.
3. There is no maximum team size.
Challenge Entries
As used in this notice, ``Entry'' is the information submitted in
the manner and format specified on the ``Open Science Prize'' Web site
(www.openscienceprize.org) including without limitation computer
programs, source code and object code. All Entries must be received by
the applicable deadline. Entries submitted after a posted Challenge
deadline will not be considered.
Entries may be submitted on behalf of a team by any of its members.
It is up to each team to organize its Entry(ies) and to follow the
Challenge submission requirements. On submission of an Entry of the
Challenge, the Solver must include the team name under which the Entry
is submitted.
All final Entries must be submitted through the Challenge Web site,
following Web site instructions and should provide necessary and
sufficient detail and annotation for reproduction of the submitted
results.
Information accompanying each Phase I Entry should include:
1. Title of project.
2. Name of team.
3. Names, field of expertise and residency of the Solver's team
members.
4. A written proposal describing the solution, no longer than 15,000
characters (not including spaces). This should include: An executive
summary of 300 words maximum; identification of open content to be
used; and a description of if, how, and under what license terms the
team intends to make any of the computer code that is part of the Entry
available to the public. Note: Executive summaries for all applications
will be shared via the prize Web site without exception and licensed
under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (CC BY 4.0), so
applicants should not include proprietary information in their summary
or any other information they are not prepared to be openly available.
5. Link to a Web presence of the proposed solution.
6. Information about how the Solver learned about the Challenge.
Information accompanying each Phase II Entry should include:
1. Title of project.
2. Name of team.
3. Names, field of expertise and residency of Solver's team members.
4. Description/specification of the prototype developed and potential
future impact of the prototype, no longer than 15,000 characters (not
including spaces).
5. Link to a Web presence of the prototype.
6. Web site URL to access the prototype and relevant instructions (1
page).
Only complete Entries, which follow application instructions, will
be reviewed and eligible to win. The NIH and Challenge Partners reserve
the right to disqualify any Challenge participants in instances where
cheating or other misconduct is identified. Details regarding the
dispute resolution process are provided on the Challenge Web site
(www.openscienceprize.org).
Warranties
By submitting an Entry to the Challenge, each Solver represents and
warrants that all information provided in the Entry and as a result of
the Challenge registration process is true and complete, that Solver
has the right and authority to submit such Entry on the Solver's own
behalf or on behalf of the persons and entities specified within the
Entry, and that the Entry:
1. Is the Solver's own original work, or is used by permission with
full and proper credit given within the Entry;
2. Does not contain confidential information or trade secrets (the
Solver's or anyone else's);
3. Does not violate or infringe upon the patent rights, industrial
design rights, copyrights, trademarks, rights of privacy, publicity or
other intellectual property or other rights of any person or entity;
4. Does not contain malicious code, such as viruses, timebombs,
cancelbots, worms, trojan horses or other potentially harmful programs
or other material or information;
5. Does not and will not violate any applicable law, statute, or
regulation; and
6. Does not trigger any reporting or royalty obligation to any third
party.
Amount of the Prize
During Phase I, up to six (6) winners may be identified. The NIH
may award up to three (3) winning teams monetary prizes of $80,000 per
team. The WT/HHMI may award up to three (3) winning teams monetary
prizes of $80,000 per team.
During Phase II, one (1) Entry will be awarded a grand prize of up
to $230,000. The NIH will award $115,000 to the U.S. member(s) of the
winning team, and the WT/HHMI will award $115,000 to the winning team.
For the NIH awards, prizes will be awarded by the NIH Contractor,
Capital Consulting Corporation.
The top 6 Entries (grand prize winner and the 5 runner-ups) may be
highlighted on the Challenge and the NIH ADDS Web sites pending
selection by the NIH.
The NIH reserves the right to cancel, suspend, and/or modify this
Challenge at any time through amendment to this Federal Register
notice. In the event the Challenge is modified, Solvers registered in
the Challenge will be notified by email and provided with a copy of the
amended Challenge rules and a listing of the changes that were made.
Any Solver who continues to participate in the Challenge following
receipt of such a notice of amendment(s), will be deemed to have
accepted any such amendment(s). If a Solver does not wish to continue
to participate in the Challenge pursuant to the Official Rules, as
amended, such Solver may terminate participation in the Challenge by
not submitting additional Entries. The NIH reserves the right to not
award prizes if no Entries are deemed worthy.
Basis Upon Which Winner Will Be Selected
Entries will be scored by the Challenge Judges using the criteria
listed below.
[[Page 63570]]
Advancement of Open Science--To what extent does the
proposal/prototype advance the goals of open science in biomedical/
health research, and fulfill the goals of openness in terms of the
product and way of working? To what extent would it move the field
forward?
Impact--What level of impact and benefit could the
proposal--if successful--deliver to the research enterprise and health
research? Does the proposal/prototype address implementation in
multiple settings in a cross-national manner?
Innovation--What level of creativity and technological
innovation does the entrant demonstrate?
Originality--Is the technology or service genuinely novel
and targeting an unmet need? Has the applicant evaluated other existing
or alternative approaches, or delineated their approach in comparison
to existing approaches (if applicable)?
Technological viability--Is the approach proposed viable?
Can the proposed technology deliver?
Resource feasibility--Does the team have the required
skills and resources?
Judges will rate each entry on five-point scale from Not-fundable
(1) to Outstanding (5). The NIH and WT will hold separate judging
panels, and then will discuss priorities for selection of the
respective winners (in Phase I), and the final winner (in Phase II).
For Phase II, public voting will select the top 3 prototypes of the
6 Phase I finalist, followed by a review of the prototypes for
feasibility and technical merit by external advisors with expertise in
Open Science. Prototypes will then be scored by Judges using the
initial Phase I criteria.
Intellectual Property
By submitting an Entry, each Solver warrants that he or she is the
sole author and owner of any copyrightable works that the Entry
comprises (or has obtained sufficient rights in any copyrightable works
owned by third parties to satisfy its obligations set forth herein),
that the works are wholly original with the Solver (or is an improved
version of an existing work that the Solver has sufficient rights to
use and improve), and that the Entry does not infringe any copyright or
any other rights of any third party of which Solver is aware.
To receive an award, Solvers will not be required to transfer their
intellectual property rights to the NIH or the Challenge Partners. Each
Solver retains title to their Entry, including object and source code,
and expressly reserves all intellectual property rights (e.g.,
copyrights and rights to inventions and patents that cover them) in
their Entry, unless the Solver chooses an open license for the Entry.
By participating in the Challenge each Solver grants to the U.S.
government a nonexclusive, non-transferrable, irrevocable, paid-up
license to practice or have practiced for or on behalf of the United
States any invention throughout the world owned or controlled by the
Solver that covers the Entry, and grants to the U.S. government and
others acting on behalf of the U.S. government, a royalty-free,
irrevocable, non-exclusive worldwide license to use, reproduce, and
display publicly all parts of the Entry for the purposes of the
Challenge. This license includes without limitation posting or linking
to the Entry on the official Challenge Web site and, except for object
code or source code, making the Entry available for research use by the
public. Notwithstanding the above and consistent with the principal
objective of the challenge to make results widely available to the
public, the NIH encourages the Solver to distribute any computer code
(object code and preferably also source code) that is part of the Entry
to the public under a liberal open source license that permits the
public to benefit from and improve upon the Entry (see the licenses
available at https://opensource.org/licenses/). The Solver should
include in its submission a description of how and under what license
terms it intends to make any computer code that is part of the Entry
available to the public.
Solvers are free to discuss their Entry and the ideas or
technologies that it contains with other parties, encouraged to share
ideas/technologies publicly, and are free to contract with any third
parties, as long as they do not sign any agreement or undertake any
obligation that conflicts with the Challenge rules set forth herein.
For the purpose of clarity, Solvers acknowledge that the intent of the
Challenge is to encourage people to collaborate and share ideas and
innovations.
Liability and Indemnification
By participating in this Challenge, each Solver agrees to assume
any and all risks and waive claims against the U.S. federal government
and its related entities (as defined in the COMPETES Act), including
Capital Consulting Corporation, the Challenge Expert Science Advisors
and Judges, 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
Challenge, whether the injury, death, damage, or loss arises through
negligence or otherwise. By participating in this Challenge, each
Solver agrees to indemnify the federal government and the Capital
Consulting Corporation against third party claims for damages arising
from or related to Challenge activities.
Insurance
Based on the subject matter of the Challenge, 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 competition participation, Solvers are not
required to obtain liability insurance or demonstrate financial
responsibility in order to participate in this Challenge.
Dated: September 28, 2015.
Lawrence A. Tabak,
Deputy Director, National Institutes of Health.
[FR Doc. 2015-26392 Filed 10-19-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140-01-P