
About the Stimulus Grants Initiative
The UBC Department of Psychiatry, in partnership with the UBC Institute of Mental Health (UBC IMH) and BC Children’s Hospital, have launched the Stimulus Grants Initiative, which aims to increase research capacity and support for clinicians and for junior academics who wish to undertake:
- Small, self-contained studies without other funding
- Pilot studies toward the pursuit of more comprehensive initiatives and/or grant applications
The 2025 application cycle has closed, and the new period will open on June 1, 2026.
INFORMATION WEBINARS
To guide potential applicants through the application process, two informal informational webinars (not recorded) will be held to answer your questions:
Dates: May 29 and September 1, 2026
Time: 12:00 pm
Where: Zoom
How to join: Open https://ubc.zoom.us/ and click on ‘Join a Meeting’ or join directly here.
Enter: Meeting ID: 485 566 3023; Passcode: 759801
You can also download these calendar reminders for the May 29, 2026, and September 1, 2026, webinars. Upon clicking the respective links, an iCal file will automatically download. For Outlook users: double-click the downloaded file to add the events to your calendar. For other calendar apps: open the file with your preferred calendar application.
Granting Streams
The Stimulus Grant Initiative comprises three streams:
- Stimulus-Clinician Grant
- Stimulus-Junior Academic Grant
- Stimulus-Child & Youth Mental Health Grant.
Eligibility Criteria
Applications to each stream will be assessed separately based on criteria that embrace equity, diversity, and inclusion in addition to scientific merit.
The proposed projects in the Clinician and Junior Academic Streams can be on any topic that is directly related to mental health.
The Stimulus-Child & Youth Mental Health Stream is sponsored by the BC Children’s Hospital Chair in Pediatric Mental Health, and proposed projects should focus exclusively on topics that are related directly to child and adolescent mental health.
Stream-Specific Eligibility Criteria for the Principal Applicant
Stimulus-Clinician Grant
The principal applicant:
- Must have a clinical, non-academic position (i.e., not hold salary funding primarily for research)
- Can be at any career stage including being a resident in the General Track of the UBC Psychiatry Residency Program.
- Must have a primary affiliation with the UBC Department of Psychiatry
- Must not have held competitive research grant funding (e.g., from CIHR, Michael Smith Health Research BC, Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute, etc) as a Principal Investigator in the past 5 years.
Stimulus-Junior Academic Grant
The principal applicant:
- Can be a Postdoctoral Fellow, Research Associate/Scientist, Assistant Professor (academic or partner track), or Resident in the Research Track of the UBC Psychiatry Residency Program.
- Must have a primary Affiliation with the UBC Department of Psychiatry
Stimulus-Child & Youth Mental Health Grant
The principal applicant:
- Can have a clinical, non-academic position at any career stage including residents in the main or research track
- Can be a Postdoctoral Fellow, Research Associate/Scientist, or Assistant Professor (academic or partner track)
- Must be connected to the BC Children’s Hospital Healthy Minds Centre
Eligibility Criteria Common to all Streams
- Each application must have ONE Principal and ONE co-applicant
- The Principal Applicant must fulfil the eligibility criteria shown above
- The co-Applicant must be a member of the Academic Faculty of the UBC Department of Psychiatry at the level of Assistant, Associate or Full Professor
- Each application can have multiple collaborators; collaborators can be clinicians or academics of any stage and may be from any UBC department or any institution in Canada or abroad
- Both the principal applicant and the co-applicant must confirm that no other funding is available or pending for the proposed project at the time of submission; the Stimulus Grants cannot be used to supplement existing funding
- Maximum duration of each proposed project: 24 months
- Maximum budget for each Project: $20,000 covering only eligible costs
- The same application cannot be submitted to more than one of the Stimulus Initiative Streams
Academic Faculty Available to Supervise Stimulus Grant Applications (2026/2027 Cycle)
Below is a list of academic faculty members who would welcome approaches from full-time clinicians interested in collaborating on a grant application for the Stimulus Grants competition, which opens on 1 June 2026. Interested applicants should contact faculty members directly. Each faculty member has provided keywords that highlight the broad topics and areas they would be happy to work on with potential applicants.
Any decision to pursue a collaboration is at the discretion of both the clinician and the faculty member. The proposed application content, scope and budget are also at the discretion of both parties, provided the final submission meets the Stimulus Grants eligibility criteria.
| Pouya Azar pouyar@mail.ubc.ca | Opioid use disorder withdrawal management |
| Clare Beasley clare.beasley@ubc.ca | Role of immune system in psychiatric disorders; blood and saliva biomarkers of inflammation/stress; effects of psychotropic medications on immune system |
| Lori Brotto lori.brotto@ubc.ca | Sexual health / sexual medicine and/or digital health tools, or mindfulness-based interventions |
| Trisha Chakrabarty trisha.chakrabarty@ubc.ca | Mood disorders (depression and bipolar disorders), cognition |
| Sinan Gülöksüz sinan.guloksuz@ubc.ca | Early predictors of lifetime mental health trajectories |
| Kyooseb Ha kyooseob.ha@ubc.ca | Diagnosis and pharmacological treatment of bipolar disorder |
| William Honer bill.honer@ubc.ca | (i) Research that generates new knowledge, above and beyond Program evaluation (ii) Psychotic disorders (iii) Cognitive disorders (iv) Psychopharmacology |
| Kyung Sue Hong kyungsue.hong@ubc.ca | Clinical Studies for exploring the phenotypic architecture of bipolar disorders |
| David Kealy david.kealy@ubc.ca | Psychotherapy process/outcome/delivery; provider-patient working relationships; personality disorders and associated concerns (identity, emotion regulation, social functioning); suicidality and self-injury |
| Kamyar Keramatian kamyar.keramatian@ubc.ca | Early identification and prevention of bipolar disorder and psychosis, and mechanism-informed and scalable psychosocial or pharmacological interventions for high-risk youth |
| Tonia Nicholls tnicholls@phsa.ca | Forensic psychiatry; assessment and treatment of violence, criminality and the development and implementation of evidence-based practice; violence risk assessments and mental health screening in correctional settings |
| John-Jose Nunez johnjose.nunez@ubc.ca | Artificial intelligence or data science, especially NLP (language) and clinical data (symptoms, demographics); cancer psychiatry or other fields of C-L psychiatry; depression; bipolar disorder |
| Christian Schütz christian.schutz@ubc.ca | Addiction, concurrent disorders, chart reviews, clinical studies |
| Steven Taylor steven.taylor@ubc.ca | Anxiety disorders and related conditions, including PTSD, OCD, and health anxiety |
| Fidel Vila-Rodriguez fidel.vilarodriguez@ubc.ca | Interventional Brain Medicine |
| Andrea Vodermaier andrea.vodermaier@ubc.ca | Effects of steroids (immunosuppressants) on post-transplant mental health and the role of pre-existing psychiatric conditions |
| Todd Woodward todd.woodward@ubc.ca | Task-based fMRI methodology for clinical applications |
Evaluation Process
Each application is reviewed by two independent reviewers who are external to both UBC and Canada. Additional selection criteria for reviewers include: (a) no current collaborations with the principal applicant or co-applicant; (b) no joint grant funding with the principal applicant or co-applicant, whether current, pending, or within the last 5 years; (c) no joint publications with the principal applicant or co-applicant within the last 5 years; and (d) no close personal relationships with the principal applicant or co-applicant.
Application are scored in 4 domains: (1) Quality of the Applicant; (2) Project Significance; (3) Project Methodology; (4) Project Feasibility. You can download the Evaluation Criteria here. Reviewers are asked to judge the application based only on the information provided in the application form.
| Scoring Guidance for All Domains | ||
| Score | Descriptor | Additional Guidance |
| 1 | Exceptional | Exceptionally strong with essentially no weaknesses |
| 2 | Outstanding | Extremely strong with negligible weaknesses |
| 3 | Excellent | Very strong with few minor weaknesses |
| 4 | Very Good | Strong but with numerous minor weaknesses |
| 5 | Good | Strong but with at least one moderate weakness |
| 6 | Satisfactory | Some strengths but also multiple weaknesses |
| 7 | Fair | Some strengths but with at least one major weakness |
| 8 | Marginal | Some strengths but also multiple major weaknesses |
| 9 | Poor | Very few strengths and multiple major weaknesses |
Criteria Considered
Quality of Applicant:
- The track record and scientific ability of the applicant, as reflected in their application
- Experience relevant to the topic of the application
- Confidence that they will carry out the proposed research project successfully.
- Additional criteria for applicants in the academic stream: (i) publication and grants relative to career stage; (ii) showing early leadership.
Project Significance:
- Does the project address an interesting topic for which there is limited available information?
- Based on the available literature, is this project redundant or of minor incremental value?
- Will the results contribute significantly to our understanding of mental disorders OR to the improvement of clinical care?
- If the aims of the project are achieved, how will scientific knowledge, technical capability, and/or clinical practice be improved?
- For academic stream only: (i) is this project likely to assist the applicant’s career development? (ii) is the project likely to provide data for a grant application to external agencies?
Project Methodology:
- Are there ethical issues, and if so have these been adequately addressed?
- Is the methodology clearly described?
- Are the overall strategy, methodology, and analyses well-reasoned and appropriate?
- Is the study sufficiently powered to achieve the stated aims?
Project Feasibility:
- Are the aims achievable within the timeframe proposed?
- Is there evidence of the feasibility of participant recruitment (if appropriate)?
- Is the proposed research project achievable with the infrastructure and other resources as detailed by the applicant?
- Are the listed collaborators appropriate in terms of their expertise?
Eligible Costs
Eligible Costs
- Salary support for the Principal Applicant
- Salary support for personnel essential for conducting the study (other than the Principal Applicant); can include salary support for research assistant or technician
- Lab costs or neuroimaging costs essential for the project
- Equipment or software licenses that are necessary for the project
- Cost of animal care/procurement if essential for the project
- Participant reimbursement essential for the project
- Expenses for training courses if essential for the project
- Travel expenses for the Principal Applicant if essential for the project (e.g., for data collection or training) (excludes any conference attendance)
- Expenses to cover open-access publishing for work resulting directly from the project (up to 3500 USD per article)
Non-Eligible Costs
- Salary support for the Co-Applicant or the Collaborators
- Any travel expenses for the Co-Applicant or Collaborators
- General equipment (e.g., laptops, personal computers)
- Any expenses associated with attendance at scientific conferences (i.e., registration, accommodation, travel fares)
Application Guidelines
Each Application Package must include:
A three-page PRINCIPAL APPLICANT PROFILE (downloadable PDF); only the principal applicant is required to complete this; no CV or profile information are needed for the academic co-applicant..
A three-page PROJECT PROPOSAL (downloadable PDF).
Please submit your application package as a single PDF document using the online SUBMISSION PORTAL by October 1 (11:59pm). Only applications using the templates provided will be considered. Should you have any specific questions about the Stimulus Grants, please direct them to Dr. Sophia Frangou at sophia.frangou@ubc.ca.
Application Timeline
Each year, applications for the Stimulus Grants Initiatives will be accepted between June 1st and October 1st.
Post-Award Reporting
Awardees are required:
- To complete a Research Project Information Form (RPIF) immediately following award notification. The RPIF should be emailed to Nicole Sanford at nicole.sanford@ubc.ca.
- To submit a Stimulus Grant: Interim Progress Report at the mid-point of the award period; this would typically be on month 12 for a 24-month project.
- To submit a Stimulus Grant: Final Report at the end of the award period.
- To submit all eligible expenses regularly throughout the grant period, ensuring that each claim is supported by appropriate receipts and documentation.
FAQs for Stimulus Grants
I am not a member of the UBC Department of Psychiatry. Can I submit a Stimulus Grant as a principal applicant or as a co-applicant?
NO. These grants are only available to applicants and co-applicants who are members of the UBC Department of Psychiatry or are part of the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at BC Children’s Hospital.
As a principal applicant, can I submit more than one application?
YES. You can submit multiple applications, but it would be advisable to focus on one well-written and well-conceived project.
As a principal applicant, can I submit the same application to more than one stream?
NO. The same application cannot be submitted to more than ONE stream.
Can my application have more than one principal applicant and more than one co-applicant?
NO. Each application shall have ONE principal applicant and ONE co-applicant.
Can I be a co-applicant on more than one application?
YES. There is no limitation to the number of applications that a faculty member can support as a co-applicant.
Can I have a member of the clinical faculty of the Department of Psychiatry as a co-applicant?
No. The co-applicant must be a member of the academic faculty of the Department of Psychiatry
Can I have collaborators from outside of the UBC Department of Psychiatry?
YES. Collaborators can be affiliated with any Department, Institution, advocacy group or industry partners within and outside Canada.
Can I have multiple collaborators?
YES. There is no formal limit, but the inclusion of collaborators should be justified, and their contribution to the project should be clearly articulated.
Do I need to submit a research project information form when I apply for a Stimulus Grant?
No. This is not required at the time of application; it applies only to awarded grants.
I want to submit an application as a principal applicant, but I plan to leave UBC in the near future. Can I take the grant money with me to my new institution?
NO. The Stimulus Grant money cannot be transferred to another institution.
I want to submit an application as a principal applicant but I plan to move to another UBC Department. Can I take the grant money with me to my new UBC Department?
NO. The Stimulus Grant money cannot be transferred to another UBC Department
I want to submit an application as a principal applicant but I plan to leave UBC in the near future. Can I transfer the grant money to another person within the UBC Department of Psychiatry?
NO. The grant money cannot be transferred to the co-applicant or any other member of the Department.
Can my project use data already collected through another study?
YES. However, the analyses you proposed should be a significant conceptual departure from the initial study, not an add-on. For example, looking at sex differences in an acquired sample would be considered an add-on analysis as the original study should have already considered or modeled sex.
Do I have to ask for the maximum budget allowable?
NO. The budget should be justified and meet the actual needs of the project. For example, if your salary is covered and you are analyzing legacy data, you can ask for money for one or two open-access publications.
Are there any rules as to how to structure my budget?
NO. You can structure your budget as most appropriate for your project, but you should only include eligible cost items (the list is available on our website) and you should stay within the maximum allowable total budget.
I currently hold a Stimulus Grant. Can I apply for another?
NO. Current Stimulus grant holders can not submit another application.
I was awarded and have successfully completed a Stimulus Grant. Can I apply for another?
Yes but only after 6 months have passed from the actual completion of your previous Stimulus Grant.
I was just awarded a Stimulus Grant. What are the next steps?
Details of the post-award requirements and monitoring are provided in the corresponding section on this website.
I was awarded a Stimulus Grant. Can I defer starting this for a year or more?
NO. You must start your project within 6 months (max) from award. There is some discretion in the case of unforeseen major personal (e.g., illness) or societal (e.g., pandemic) events that are reasonably expected to impact your ability to conduct your project.
I plan to be away from UBC for a period of time, during the period I should be starting my grant. Can I defer it?
NO. The award cannot be deferred in the case of pre-planned periods of absence.
List of Awardees
2025/2026
Stimulus-Junior Academic Grant
Dr. Andrea Vodermaier, Assistant Professor (Partner): Predictive Value of the Standard Integrated Psychosocial Assessment of Transplant (SIPAT) in liver transplant candidate
Stimulus-Child and Youth Mental Health Grant
Dr. Sharon Hou: Exploring the intersection of autism, culture, and eating disorders: Perspectives from autistic young people with eating disorders
2024/2025
Stimulus-Clinician Grant
Dr. Ashok Krishnamoorthy, Clinical Associate Professor: Contingency management to increase antipsychotic treatment retention in Provincial Correction
Stimulus-Junior Academic Grant
Dr. Marianne Hrabok, PGY4 Resident, Research Track: Real world clinical and functional outcomes in difficult to treat depression: A preliminary study of supratherapeutic dosing, es/ketamine, rTMS, and ECT in an Interventional Psychiatry Clinic
Stimulus-Child and Youth Mental Health Grant
Dr. Martha J. Ignaszewski, Clinical Assistant Professor: Youth Overdose Cohort: Post overdose treatment experience of adolescents and young adults. A pilot and feasibility study
2023/2024
Stimulus-Clinician Grant
Dr. Ivan Torres, Clinical Professor: Preliminary investigation of psychometric properties of a scale to assess compensatory cognitive strategies in people with psychiatric illness
Stimulus-Junior Academic Grant
Dr. Clare Killikelly, Postdoctoral Research Fellow: Digital early detection of psychological disorder after the loss of a loved one
Stimulus-Child and Youth Mental Health Grant
Dr. Shira Segal, Postdoctoral Research Fellow: Small-Scale Group Treatment of Selective Mutism in Adolescent
2022/2023
Stimulus-Clinician Grant
Dr. Michael Song, PGY1 Resident: Epigenetic markers for adverse childhood experiences among complex concurrent psychiatric disorders: a pilot stud
Stimulus-Junior Academic Grant
Dr. Heather Palis, Postdoctoral Research Fellow: Examining ten-year trends of ADHD diagnosis and treatment in British Columbia among people with concurrent substance use disorders and history of incarceration
Stimulus-Child and Youth Mental Health Grant
Dr. Clara Westwell-Roper, CAP Subspecialty Resident: Longitudinal variation in markers of stress and inflammation in youth with obsessive-compulsive disorder and their parents participating in group family-based cognitive behavioural therapy
Dr. Ruiyang Ge, Research Associate: Individual-Level Deviations from Normative Neuroanatomical Models in Youth with Mood Disorders