← Leaderboards
Yong Min Ahn
University Of California Los Angeles
$2,966,252
Attributed
$8,898,757
Total exposure
1
Grants
0
Lead (contact PI)
Attributed= this PI's even-split share of every grant they're on (the fair, additive number). Exposure = full size of all those grants.
Funding over time
peak $2.4M · FY2021–25$2.5M$1.9M$1.3M$625K$0
'21
'22
'23
'24
'25
Funding mix
By agency
NIH$8,898,757 · 1
By mechanism
U01$8,898,757 · 1
Top collaborators
- Jonathan Flint6 shared
- Kenneth Seedman Kendler6 shared
Most similar at University Of California Los Angeles
Same institution · by research overlap
- Nelson B Freimer$46,465,985
- Carlos Lopez Jaramillo$7,730,782
- Loes Marlein Olde Loohuis$8,516,765
- Carrie E Bearden$49,487,063
- Paul M Thompson$55,589,208
Others in their field
Other Emerging Leaders on “Disease Heterogeneity”
- Chanza Baytop · Westat, Inc.$271,217,917
- Douglas S. Hawkins · Children'S Hosp Of Philadelphia$157,315,120
- Christopher Barnaby Nelson · University Of Melbourne$27,954,628
- Kathleen Maletic Neuzil · Emory University$26,552,931
- George Robert Painter · University Of Alabama At Birmingham$25,957,440
- Rene S. Kahn · Icahn School Of Medicine At Mount Sinai$16,767,001
Research focus
Disease HeterogeneityDetectionDisabilityAfrican AmericanAlcohol AbuseBayesian MethodDepressive SymptomsDiagnosisBipolar DisorderCalendarCausal VariantCharacteristicsChild AbuseChinaAnxiety DisordersAdultBiologicalCognitive ChangeCohortCollaborationsCollectionComorbidityData SetDrug Abuse
Grant awards (6)
Identifying the genetic causes of depression in a deeply phenotyped population from South Korea$693,090
U01 · FY2025 · MH
Identifying the genetic causes of depression in a deeply phenotyped population from South Korea$554,066
U01 · FY2025 · MH
Identifying the genetic causes of depression in a deeply phenotyped population from South Korea$2,361,154
U01 · FY2024 · MH
Identifying the genetic causes of depression in a deeply phenotyped population from South Korea$1,892,866
U01 · FY2023 · MH
Identifying the genetic causes of depression in a deeply phenotyped population from South Korea$1,628,438
U01 · FY2022 · MH
Identifying the genetic causes of depression in a deeply phenotyped population from South Korea$1,769,143
U01 · FY2021 · MH