Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 10
U.S. Navy Cancels $1.5 Million Cognition Grant as It Shifts From Basic to Applied Research
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 10

U.S. Navy Cancels $1.5 Million Cognition Grant as It Shifts From Basic to Applied Research

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 10

Summary

  • Jessica Cantlon said the Navy canceled her $1.5 million grant halfway through a project testing whether nine weeks of training could improve spatial reasoning and mathematical thinking.
  • The cut came after the department closed the broader attention control program and told researchers it was moving priorities away from basic research toward more applied work.
  • Cantlon said her team had completed only about two-thirds of the f.M.R.I. scans, had early signs the training worked, and had not yet finished analyzing the data.
  • The cancellation wiped out about one-third of the project’s total funding and forced the lab to seek replacement support for a postdoctoral researcher, technician and graduate student.
  • Cantlon said the lost work could slow future breakthroughs because applied science depends on basic research to generate new discoveries.

Insights

A canceled brain study highlights a funding shift. What is the true cost of devaluing basic science?
With basic research grants in decline, how will the pipeline for breakthrough technologies be sustained?