Skip to main content

Understanding the NIH Alphabet Soup

Posted by on Friday, October 24, 2025 in Announcements, Path to Career Resources .

Applying for NIH fellowships comes with a whole new set of acronyms. Here’s a quick guide to the ones you’re most likely to encounter:

Funding Announcements

  • FOAFunding Opportunity Announcement
    The official notice that describes eligibility, objectives, requirements, and deadlines for a grant or fellowship.
  • NOFONotice of Funding Opportunity
    The newer term NIH is using in place of FOA. You may see both used, but they mean the same thing.
  • PAProgram Announcement
    Another type of FOA that highlights areas of interest.
  • RFARequest for Applications
    A type of FOA/NOFO that announces a more specific research priority area. Fellowships usually come from Parent Announcements rather than RFAs, but you might see these for other mechanisms.
  • Parent Announcements
    Broad FOAs/NOFOs that allow NIH Institutes and Centers to accept fellowship applications in all areas of science. The majority of F31 and F32 applications are submitted through parent announcements.

Fellowship Mechanisms

  • F31NRSA Individual Predoctoral Fellowship
    Supports promising doctoral students conducting dissertation research.
  • F32NRSA Individual Postdoctoral Fellowship
    Supports postdoctoral researchers in advanced training and development of research independence.
  • NRSANational Research Service Award
    The program mechanism that provides support for research training, including F31 and F32 fellowships.

People and Roles

  • POProgram Officer
    The NIH staff member who oversees fellowship programs within an Institute. They are your primary NIH contact.
  • SROScientific Review Officer
    The NIH staff scientist who manages the peer review process and assigns reviewers to your application.
  • GMGrant Manager
    Your institutional contact (at Vanderbilt, specific to your department) who manages internal deadlines, compliance, and submission.
  • PIPrincipal Investigator
    YOU are the PI on a fellowship application.
  • Candidate
    YOU are the candidate
  • Sponsor(s)
    The faculty who will provide mentorship for your fellowship research (usually your PhD or postdoctoral research advisor)
  • Sponsoring organization
    The primary location where the research will occur
  • Applicant
    Your sponsoring organization (Vanderbilt)

Review Process

  • SRGScientific Review Group (Study Section)
    The panel of scientists who review and score your application for scientific merit.
  • CSRCenter for Scientific Review
    The NIH office that manages most fellowship reviews (and other grants like R01s).

Letters and Documents

  • LORLetter of Reference
    Required letters (3–5) written by individuals not directly involved in your project but who can speak to your training, potential, and qualifications.
  • LOSLetter of Support
    Letters from collaborators or others directly involved in your project, showing their commitment to your training and research plan.

Systems and IDs

  • eRA CommonsElectronic Research Administration Commons
    The NIH online portal for application submission and tracking. Applicants, sponsors, and referees all use this system.
  • ORCIDOpen Researcher and Contributor ID
    A unique identifier that links you to your research outputs and is required for NIH applications.

Funding Outcomes

  • NOANotice of Award
    The official document that confirms your fellowship has been funded.

 

More acronyms can be found on the NIH Glossary page: https://grants.nih.gov/grants/glossary.htm

Click here to go back to the main Fellowship Project Management blog series. 

Tags: ,

VIEW MORE EVENTS >