Funding

From early days CompuCell3D was funded by science grants. The list of funding entities include

  • National Institutes of Health (NIH)

  • US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

  • National Science Foundation (NSF)

  • Falk Foundation

  • Indiana University (IU)

  • IBM

The development of CC3D was funded fully or partially by the following awards:

  • National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering,U24 EB028887, “Dissemination of libRoadRunner and CompuCell3D”, (09/30/2019 – 06/30/2024)

  • National Science Foundation, NSF 1720625, “Network for Computational Nanotechnology - Engineered nanoBIO Node”, (09/1/2017-08/31/2022)

  • National Institutes of Health, National Institute of General Medical Sciences, R01 GM122424, “Competitive Renewal of Development and Improvement of the Tissue Simulation Toolkit”, (02/01/2017 - 01/31/2021)

  • Falk Medical Research Trust Catalyst Program, Falk 44-38-12, “Integrated in vitro/in silico drug screening for ADPKD”, (11/30/2014-11/29/2017)

  • National Institutes of Health, National Institute of General Medical Sciences, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, U01 GM111243 “Development of a Multiscale Mechanistic Simulation of Acetaminophen-Induced Liver Toxicity”, (9/25/14-6/30/19)

  • National Institutes of Health, National Institute of General Medical Sciences, R01 GM076692, “Competitive Renewal of MSM: Multiscale Studies of Segmentation in Vertebrates”, (9/1/05-8/31/18)

      1. Environmental Protection Agency, R835001, “Ontologies for Data & Models for Liver Toxicology”, (6/1/11-5/30/15)

  • National Institutes of Health, National Institute of General Medical Sciences, R01 GM077138, “Competitive Renewal of Development and Improvement of the Tissue Simulation Toolkit”, (9/1/07-3/31/15).

      1. Environmental Protection Agency, National Center for Environmental Research, R834289, “The Texas-Indiana Virtual STAR Center: Data-Generating in vitro and in silico Models of Development in Embryonic Stem Cells and Zebrafish”, (11/1/09-10/31/13)

  • Pervasive Technologies Laboratories Fellowship (Indiana University Bloomington) (12/1/03-11/30/04).

  • IBM Innovation Institute Award (9/25/03-9/24/06)

  • National Science Foundation, Division of Integrative Biology, IBN-0083653, “BIOCOMPLEXITY–Multiscale Simulation of Avian Limb Development”, (9/1/00-8/31/07)