ToolsConductScience tool
NIH InvestigatorsFree in-browser calculator

Find Collaborators.

Discover NIH-funded investigators by research topic, institution, and department. Build stronger grant teams with data — powered by ScienceDex.

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Validated2026-04-09
CitableMethods and citation included

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Results update in place

When to use

  • Identify NIH-funded investigators working on topics relevant to your grant
  • Find potential co-PIs or co-investigators for multi-PI grant applications
  • Discover active researchers at specific institutions for multi-site proposals
  • Assess a potential collaborator’s NIH funding track record before reaching out
  • Explore who is funded in a department or research area you’re entering

Do not use for

  • As the sole basis for choosing a collaborator — always verify expertise through publications and personal contact
  • For non-NIH funded investigators — this data covers NIH awards only
  • To evaluate investigator quality — funding totals do not reflect research impact or mentorship

High grant count signals collaboration experience

Investigators who appear as co-PI on multiple grants are practiced collaborators. They understand multi-PI dynamics and are more likely to contribute effectively to your team.

Check both lead PI and co-PI roles

An investigator with mostly lead PI roles may prefer to direct their own projects. Someone with a healthy mix of lead and co-PI roles is likely more open to collaborative arrangements.

Use institution filter for multi-site grants

Multi-site proposals are stronger when each site brings unique capabilities. Search the same topic across different institutions to build a geographically diverse team.

Active funding is not the only signal

Investigators between funding cycles may be eager to join new collaborations. Disable the "Active Funding Only" filter to find experienced researchers who are currently unfunded but have strong track records.

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Method

Investigator profiles are aggregated from NIH RePORTER award records (1.3M+ projects, FY 2000–2024). Each profile includes total funding, grant count, lead PI vs. co-PI role counts, and the most relevant matched project title. Search uses full-text matching on project titles and abstracts. Results are paginated and sortable by total funding, grant count, name, or most recent award year.

2

Validated

Last validated 2026-04-09. Calculations are designed for planning and documentation support; verify procurement decisions against manufacturer specifications or institutional SOPs.

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How to cite

How to Cite

ConductScience Find Collaborators (v1.0). ConductScience, Inc. 2026. Available at: https://conductscience.com/tools/find-collaborators. Investigator data powered by ScienceDex.

NIH RePORTER. Research Portfolio Online Reporting Tools. National Institutes of Health, 2024.

NIH Office of Extramural Research. Multi-PI (MPI) Grant Applications Policy. 2024.

Team Science Fundamentals

NIH increasingly favors team science — collaborative grants that bring together complementary expertise. Key concepts:

Multi-PI grants: R01s and other mechanisms now allow multiple PIs with shared leadership. Each PI must bring distinct expertise that justifies their role. • Co-Investigators vs. Consultants: Co-Is contribute sustained intellectual effort and are named on the application. Consultants provide specific, limited services. Reviewers scrutinize whether the team structure matches the science. • Institutional diversity: Multi-site collaborations can strengthen an application by demonstrating access to diverse patient populations, equipment, or model systems. • Track record matters: Reviewers look for evidence that the proposed team has actually worked together before — co-authored papers, prior collaborative grants, or shared training.

Multi-PI Grant Strategies

Complementary, not overlapping: Each PI must bring a capability the others lack. Reviewers flag teams where PI expertise overlaps heavily. • Leadership plan is mandatory: Multi-PI R01s require a formal leadership plan describing decision-making, conflict resolution, and resource allocation. This is a scored element. • Budget justification per PI: Each PI’s effort and budget must be justified relative to their specific contribution. Under-budgeting a PI signals they’re a token addition. • Early-stage investigators: Including an ESI co-PI can be strategic — some study sections view mentoring the next generation favorably, and ESI status confers payline advantages on certain mechanisms. • Cross-institutional overhead: Multi-site grants require subaward budgets with separate F&A rates. Budget for administrative coordination time — reviewers know it’s needed.

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