Emerging Models and Technologies for Computation (EMT)
The summary for the Emerging Models and Technologies for Computation (EMT) grant is detailed below.
This summary states who is eligible for the grant, how much grant money will be awarded, current and past deadlines, Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) numbers, and a sampling of similar government grants.
Verify the accuracy of the data FederalGrants.com provides by visiting the webpage noted in the Link to Full Announcement section or by contacting the appropriate person listed as the Grant Announcement Contact.
If any section is incomplete, please visit the website for the National Science Foundation, which is the U.S. government agency offering this grant.
Emerging Models and Technologies for Computation (EMT): The EMT program seeks to advance the fundamental capabilities of computer and information sciences and engineering by capitalizing on advances and insights from areas such as biological systems, quantum phenomena, nanoscale science and engineering, and other novel computing concepts. To bring fundamental changes to software, hardware and architectural design aspects of future computing models, collaborations among computer scientists, engineers, mathematicians, biologists and other disciplinary scientists are imperative.Research of interest should move beyond evolutionary technological advances to innovations that enable fundamentally different ways of computing. These innovations should promise much higher speeds/chip densities or should solve more complex problems than traditional approaches currently permit.The EMT program supports cross- and inter-disciplinary research and education projects that explore ideas, theory and experiments which go beyond conventional wisdom and venture into a range of uncharted territories in order to advance computing capabilities, and/or that produce innovative curricula or educational materials to help advance the training of new experts in emerging computing models and technologies. Explicit efforts will be made to support untested theories and approaches that provide plausible but high-risk opportunities. Proposals that are not clearly collaborative and/or interdisciplinary in nature are likely to be less competitive.
Federal Grant Title: | Emerging Models and Technologies for Computation (EMT) |
Federal Agency Name: | National Science Foundation |
Grant Categories: | Science and Technology |
Type of Opportunity: | Discretionary |
Funding Opportunity Number: | 07-523 |
Type of Funding: | Grant |
CFDA Numbers: | 47.070 |
CFDA Descriptions: | Computer and Information Science and Engineering |
Current Application Deadline: | No deadline provided |
Original Application Deadline: | Feb 14, 2007 |
Posted Date: | Nov 14, 2006 |
Creation Date: | Feb 14, 2007 |
Archive Date: | Mar 16, 2007 |
Total Program Funding: | $16,000,000 |
Maximum Federal Grant Award: | $500,000 |
Minimum Federal Grant Award: | $125,000 |
Expected Number of Awards: | 45 |
Cost Sharing or Matching: | No |
- Applicants Eligible for this Grant
- Unrestricted (i.e., open to any type of entity above), subject to any clarification in text field entitled "Additional Information on Eligibility"
- Additional Information on Eligibility
- An investigator may participate as PI, co-PI or Senior Personnel in at most one proposal each calendar year in response to this solicitation.
- Link to Full Grant Announcement
- Information not provided
- Grant Announcement Contact
- If you have any problems linking to this funding announcement, please contact [email protected] NSF grants.gov support
- Similar Government Grants
- • Computer Science for All
- • Improving Undergraduate STEM Education: Computing in Undergraduate Education
- • Computer and Information Science and Engineering Research Expansion Program
- • Campus Cyberinfrastructure
- • Enabling Access to the Semiconductor Chip Ecosystem for Design, Fabrication, and Training
- • Science and Engineering Information Integration and Informatics (SEII)
- • Emerging Models and Technologies for Computation
- • Networking Technology and Systems (NeTS)
- More Grants from the National Science Foundation
- • NSF Regional Innovation Engines
- • Cyberinfrastructure for Public Access and Open Science
- • IUSE/Professional Formation of Engineers: Revolutionizing Engineering Departments
- • Probability
- • Louis Stokes Alliances for Minority Participation