What is a Payline NIH?

What is a Payline NIH?

Paylines Are a Conservative Funding Cutoff Point Each fiscal year, we set our paylines, funding cutoff points that we use to fund unsolicited applications. You can find them at NIAID Paylines. Number of applications reviewed by NIAID-relevant study sections. Amount of grant money in the budget.

Is an impact score of 30 good?

Impact scores run from 10 to 90, where 10 is best. Generally speaking, impact/priority scores of 10 to 30 are most likely to be funded; scores between 31 and 45 might be funded; scores greater than 46 are rarely funded.

What is a Payline?

A payline is a lineup of specific symbols on which a payout will be awarded. Today’s slots feature many symbols and paylines. Paylines can line up in horizontal, vertical, diagonal or even zigzag patterns for a win. Plus, you can bet on as many paylines as you want.

What is an NIH priority score?

Priority scores are typically available in your NIH eRA Commons account a few days after applications are reviewed. Priority scores run from 10 (best) to 90 (worst). A fellowship (F, or NRSA) application considered in fiscal year 2013 and given a score of 10 has a 100% chance of getting funded.

How hard is it to get a K99?

Applying for the K99 is tough, there are a lot of application components and people involved, and you need to develop a solid 5-year research and training plan.

What is a fundable NIH score?

Definitely fundable. These are very high scores (or in NIH, very low number), usually nearing 20. A score that would almost certainly be funded is a score of 23.

What is slot Payline?

Paylines. A payline is a lineup of specific symbols on which a payout will be awarded. Today’s slots feature many symbols and paylines. Paylines can line up in horizontal, vertical, diagonal or even zigzag patterns for a win. Plus, you can bet on as many paylines as you want.

What is Payline construction?

(civil engineering) The planned limit of an excavation, beyond which a contractor is not paid for any excavation work.

Posted In Q&A