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Matthew Bonser Johnson
Broad Institute, Inc.
$386,440
Attributed
$386,440
Total exposure
1
Grants
1
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. They are the sole PI on all grants (the two match).
Funding over time
peak $212.7K · FY2022–23$250K$187.5K$125K$62.5K$0
'22
'23
Funding mix
By agency
NIH$386,440 · 1
By mechanism
R21$386,440 · 1
Top collaborators
No co-investigators on record.
Most similar at Broad Institute, Inc.
Same institution · by research overlap
- Benjamin E Deverman$18,180,267
- Steven Andrew McCarroll$60,406,795
- Evan Z Macosko$39,501,347
- Gad A Getz$28,676,822
- Yating Wang$4,966,476
Others in their field
Other Rising Stars on “Adolescence”
- Christine W Hockett · Avera Mckennan$8,908,366
- Michael E. Roth · Public Health Institute$8,201,777
- Henry Sachs · Emma Pendleton Bradley Hospital$7,940,991
- Matthew Morrow Engelhard · Duke University$7,519,665
- Bhaven Mehta$7,276,100
- Michael Hogarth · University Of California, San Diego$5,162,770
Research focus
AdolescenceAdolescent Brain DevelopmentAdolescent DevelopmentAdolescentAnimal ModelAreaAssociation CortexAtlasesAutism Spectrum DisorderAdultBehavioralBioinformaticsBipolar DisorderBrainBrain RegionCallithrixCallithrix Jacchus JacchusCellsCell TypeCerebral CortexChildhoodClinically RelevantCognitionCognitive
Grant awards (2)
Gene expression changes during postnatal development of the marmoset, mouse, and human brain: a pilot study with focus on prefrontal cortex,adolescence, and psychiatric risk genetics$212,720
R21 · FY2023 · MH · contact PI
Gene expression changes during postnatal development of the marmoset, mouse, and human brain: a pilot study with focus on prefrontal cortex,adolescence, and psychiatric risk genetics$173,720
R21 · FY2022 · MH · contact PI