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HHMI Investigators are established researchers, including physician-scientists, who push the boundaries of basic biological and biomedical sciences, working across many scientific disciplines in a wide range of organisms at institutions across the US. Investigators create inclusive, collaborative research environments that prepare early career scientists for future success, and their fundamental discoveries have been broadly recognized by the scientific community, including Nobel Prizes awarded to more than 30 current or emeriti Investigators.

Investigators are HHMI employees who receive full salary and benefits from the Institute while maintaining academic appointments and labs at their home institutions. Once appointed to a seven-year, renewable term, Investigators receive financial support for their research, access to capital equipment funds, and induction into the vibrant HHMI community of Investigators, Freeman Hrabowski Scholars, Hanna Gray and Gilliam Fellows, and more. Eligibility for the program has been expanded to include scientists who have held their first independent faculty position for a minimum of seven years, with no upper career-stage limit.


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Life as an HHMI Investigator
 

 

 

Freedom to pursue your boldest ideas 

Each Investigator receives generous support over a seven-year term, renewable indefinitely pending successful review. Investigators remain affiliated with their institution and become employees of HHMI, receiving their full salary, benefits, and research budgets through the Institute.

 

Robust equipment allotment 

As a supplement to core support, Investigators may also submit capital equipment requests to the Institute for scientific equipment necessary to their research. 

 

Join a vibrant scientific community 

Investigators are part of a large, active community of HHMI scientists spanning career stages who collaborate and attend scientific meetings to share new research. 

HHMI Investigator Kevan Shokat and his lab are charting new therapies to outmaneuver drug resistance and better target common cancer cell mutations.A team of researchers led by HHMI Investigator Michael Rosen has captured the most detailed images yet of the molecules in chromatin condensates — droplet-like structures of compacted DNA. HHMI scientists Michael Yartsev and Gerald Carter are uncovering how bats learn, remember, and form social bonds — findings that could reshape how we understand our own brains and behaviors.New research led by HHMI Janelia Research Campus Senior Group Leader Meng Wang provides insights into how changes that help organisms deal with environmental stress are conferred to their offspring.