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The first stage of NIH peer review serves to provide expert advice to NIH on the scientific and technical merit of grant applications. Applications are evaluated based on five scored criteria: Significance, Investigators, Innovation, Approach, and Environment (see complete definitions).
The first stage of NIH peer review serves to provide expert advice to NIH on the scientific and technical merit of grant applications. Applications are evaluated based on five scored criteria: Significance, Investigators, Innovation, Approach, and Environment (see complete definitions).
A grant number provides unique identification for the grant. The figure below shows an example of a complete NIH grant number. Sample Grant Number: 1 R01 CA 123456-01A1. The grant number is comprised of the following parts: Application Type: Indicates the type of application (e.g., new, renewal, non-competing, etc.)
Scoring. The NIH utilizes a 9-point rating scale (1 = exceptional; 9 = poor) for all applications; the same scale is used for overall impact scores and for criterion scores (Scoring Guidance).
The NIH grant application scoring system uses a 9-point rating scale (1 = exceptional; 9 = poor) in whole numbers (no decimals) for Overall Impact and Criterion scores for all applications. NIH expects that scores of 1 or 9 will be used less frequently than the other scores.
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The NIH uses a 9-point rating scale for all applications with a score of 1 meaning exceptional. Applications are assessed by at least 3 reviewers prior to the peer review meeting and each assigned reviewer provides a preliminary impact score.
Instead of using a fixed set of criteria, evaluators are asked to consider the proposals innovativeness, potential impact, and alignment with the organizations mission. Evaluators then rank the proposals based on their assessments and discuss their rankings in a panel to determine the final funding decisions.
The NIH scoring system uses a 9-point rating scale from 1 = Exceptional to 9 = Poor for the overall impact/priority score as well as the individual review criteria. Ratings are provided only in whole numbers, not decimals.

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