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What is a Conte Center?

Conte Centers for Basic and Translational Mental Health Research are funded by The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). The purpose of these Centers is to support interdisciplinary teams of researchers engaging in integrative, novel, and creative experimental approaches to address high-risk, high-impact questions that will significantly advance the state of the science in brain and behavioral research relevant to mental health.
Conte Centers comprise a collaborative, cutting-edge, inter-disciplinary research program conducted at multiple levels of analysis spanning from genes to behavior to disease in humans, animals, and model systems, from infancy to adulthood as appropriate, based on a well-defined and unified scientific question (hypothesis) or problem. Areas of interest span the full range of basic neuroscience, basic behavioral science, genetics research, proof-of-concept clinical trials, as well as the translational integration of neuroscience and behavioral science with study of the etiology, pathogenesis, and/or the developmental progression of mental disorders across the lifespan. Proposed Centers should be directed towards a well-defined and unified scientific question or problem and in some instances may include discovery-based as well as technology development components.
The Conte Centers program is intended to support research demonstrating an extraordinary level of synergy, integration, and potential for advancement of the state of the field, and is intended only for projects that could not be achieved by using other, more standard grant mechanisms. Support is provided both for individual research projects and for core support that is critical to the integration across Center components. Centers are characterized by an interdisciplinary framework guiding highly integrated programs of cutting-edge research, with the aim of rapid, widespread sharing of the resulting data to accelerate research on mental health. essential for successful applications.

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