- Principal investigator
A principal investigator (PI) is the lead
scientist for a particular well-defined science (or other academic) project, such as an astronomical observing campaign, laboratory study orclinical trial .In the context of
federal funding from agencies such asNASA or theNSF , the PI is the person who takes direct responsibility for completion of a funded project, directing the research and reporting directly to the funding agency. [See e.g. NSF Grant Policy Manual 210f 'Definitions: Principal Investigator', available: http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2002/nsf02151/gpm2.jsp#210; NIAID (NIH) 'Glossary of Funding and Policy Terms and Acronyms', available: http://www.niaid.nih.gov/ncn/glossary/default5.htm#pi] For small projects (which might involve 1-5 people) the PI is typically the person who conceived of the investigation, but for larger projects (such as the construction of scientificspacecraft orobservatories ) the PI may be selected by a team to obtain the best strategic advantage for the project.In the context of a clinical trial a PI may be an academic working with grants from
NIH or other funding agencies, or may be effectively a contractor for apharmaceutical company working on testing the safety and efficacy of new medicines.List of notable principal investigators
*
Carroll Alley on the Apollo Program'sLunar Laser Ranging Experiment
*Phil Christensen of theMars Global Surveyor Thermal Emission Spectrometer and theMars Odyssey THEMIS instruments
*Riccardo Giacconi of theChandra X-ray Observatory
*Shrinivas Kulkarni of theSpace Interferometry Mission
*Steve Squyres of theMars Exploration Rover s "Spirit" and "Opportunity"
*Alan Stern of theNew Horizons probe to PlutoReferences
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