Public Policy & NGOs
Here's a look at documents from public policy and non-governmental organizations
Featured Stories
STAND UP AMERICA: GOVERNOR DESANTIS SIGNS EXTREME PARTISAN GERRYMANDERING BILL
WASHINGTON, May 5 -- Stand Up America, an organization was born in 2016 as a digital-first grassroots community working to resist what they say is Donald Trump's corruption, racism and his threats to democracy, issued the following news release on May 4, 2026:
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GOVERNOR DESANTIS SIGNS EXTREME PARTISAN GERRYMANDERING BILL
TALLAHASSEE, FL.-- Today, Governor DeSantis signed a bill to redraw the state's congressional districts to give his party four more seats in Congress -- despite Florida's constitution explicitly banning partisan gerrymandering. For years, Governor DeSantis has faced accusations
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WASHINGTON, May 5 -- Stand Up America, an organization was born in 2016 as a digital-first grassroots community working to resist what they say is Donald Trump's corruption, racism and his threats to democracy, issued the following news release on May 4, 2026:
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GOVERNOR DESANTIS SIGNS EXTREME PARTISAN GERRYMANDERING BILL
TALLAHASSEE, FL.-- Today, Governor DeSantis signed a bill to redraw the state's congressional districts to give his party four more seats in Congress -- despite Florida's constitution explicitly banning partisan gerrymandering. For years, Governor DeSantis has faced accusationsof voter suppression and gutting representation for Black Floridians. The new maps would target Black voters.
Stand Up America's Executive Director, Christina Harvey, issued the following statement:
"After months of pushing for an extreme partisan gerrymander, Governor DeSantis finally got his wish - at the expense of his constituents.
"As working families struggle with skyrocketing costs of housing, groceries, and gas, Governor Ron DeSantis and Republican lawmakers ignored Floridians' needs and made it their top priority to rig congressional maps in an effort to help D.C. Republicans cling to power. Voters will remember how their lawmakers put politics and partisanship above the needs of their constituents."
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About Stand Up America
Stand Up America is a progressive advocacy organization with 2.8 million community members across the country. Focused on grassroots advocacy to stand up to corruption and voter suppression and build a more representative democracy, Stand Up America has driven nearly 2 million calls to lawmakers, registered over 100,000 voters, mobilized over 100,000 protestors, and contacted tens of millions of voters.
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Original text here: https://standupamerica.com/2026/05/governor-desantis-signs-extreme-partisan-gerrymandering-bill/
[Category: Political]
Online Now: New NCFR Journal Research
ST. PAUL, Minnesota, May 5 -- The National Council on Family Relations issued the following news on May 4, 2026:
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Online Now: New NCFR Journal Research
Read 19 New Early-View Articles Published April 26-May 2
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Keep up with the latest research from NCFR's three scholarly journals -- Journal of Marriage and Family (JMF), Family Relations: Interdisciplinary Journal of Applied Family Science (FR), and Journal of Family Theory & Review (JFTR).
Most Recent Journal Issues:
JMF April 2026 issue (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/17413737/2026/88/2): Includes articles on financial and childcare
... Show Full Article
ST. PAUL, Minnesota, May 5 -- The National Council on Family Relations issued the following news on May 4, 2026:
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Online Now: New NCFR Journal Research
Read 19 New Early-View Articles Published April 26-May 2
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Keep up with the latest research from NCFR's three scholarly journals -- Journal of Marriage and Family (JMF), Family Relations: Interdisciplinary Journal of Applied Family Science (FR), and Journal of Family Theory & Review (JFTR).
Most Recent Journal Issues:
JMF April 2026 issue (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/17413737/2026/88/2): Includes articles on financial and childcareresources, couple and family dynamics, and more.
FR April 2026 issue (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/17413729/2026/75/2): Features research on parenting and development, family resources, romantic relationships, family resources during COVID-19, and much more.
JFTR March 2026 issue (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/17562589/2026/18/1): Includes an "Original Voices" piece by NCFR Fellow Pauline Boss, Ph.D.; several articles on theoretical advances; a number of scoping reviews and "Emerging Voices" articles; and more.
New Early-View Articles Published Online (April 26-May 2):
Journal of Family Theory & Review:
* Adolescence: A Critical Media Review -- Erin K. Andrea, Emma M. Desens Gochanour, Lizee Nunez Love
* Are We Willing to Change? A Feminist Agenda for the Study of Men in Families (open access) -- Aran Garnett-Deakin, Caroline Sanner
* Effects of Paternal Unemployment on Family Dynamics and Well-Being: A Systematic Review (open access) -- Nebi Sumer, F. Umut Bespinar, Anna Sieben, Zeynep Bespinar, Ladin Gurdal, Oznur Usaklilar, Zeynep Kapisiz, Ezel Usten
* Couple Dynamics Following Brain Cancer Diagnosis: A Scoping Review (open access) -- Nick Frye-Cox, Zoee Johnson, Olivia Shores, Maria Boccia, Jennifer H. Murillo
Journal of Marriage and Family:
* Independent or Joint? How Relative Income and Wealth Relate to Couples' Money Management in Eastern and Western Germany (open access) -- Agnieszka Althaber, Nicole Kapelle, Kathrin Leuze
* Introducing the Future of Families Third Generation (FFG3) Study -- Julien O. Teitler, Kathryn M. Neckerman, Ryan B. Fuenmayor, Ana Gonzalez, Nancy E. Reichman
* Earnings Trajectories Around Parenthood: Male Same-Sex Couples in Denmark, the Netherlands and Sweden -- Weverthon Machado, Marie Evertsson, Maaike van der Vleuten, Eva Jaspers
Family Relations:
* Peer-facilitated HMRE programming: A successful approach for emerging adult relationship education -- Alyssa McElwain, Shu Su
* Translation and psychometric evaluation of the Parental Stress Scale in a Swedish sample (open access) -- Asa Carlsund, Lotha Valan, Asa Hornsten, Ulf Isaksson
* Adult grandchildren's perception of grandparents' personality and emotional closeness with the grandparent (open access) -- Shiyue Bao, Tianyuan Li
* Perceptions of Parenting Beliefs and Practices in Fathers of Adolescents (open access) -- Marcus Gottlieb, Jessica P. Lougheed
* Relationship between grandparenting stress and emotional well-being: The moderating role of benefit finding -- Shi-Min Chen, Jie Fang, Yan-Yun Xiao
* From individual to community: A mediation model of support for women experiencing intimate partner abuse (open access) -- Tamar Ginati, Yael Itzhaki-Braun
* How parental influences and self-concept shape adolescent brand sensitivity and purchase behavior -- George Chung-Chi Shen
* Cultural adaptation and validation of an instrument assessing family interactions: The Revised Picnic Game -- Maria Jose Leon, Javiera Romo, Nicolas Favez, Antonia Muzard, Carolina Honorato, Constanza Mena, Marcia Olhaberry, Stefanella Costa, Herve Tissot, Francisca Perez Cortes
* How to reciprocate with love? The impact of gift-giving on marital satisfaction -- Shichang Liang, Huijie Zhu, Wenrong Chen, Wanshan Deng, Junyan He, Yizheng Zhou, Hongjie Fu
* Stability and change in children's residence arrangements after parental separation -- Tonje Holt, Linda Larsen, Daniel R. Meyer, Bruce M. Smyth
* Parenting in the digital age: How parenting stress shapes screen media parenting strategies -- Enid A. Moreira, Alexandra Schek, Daniel M. Bagner, Shayl F. Griffith
* The great paradox of parenthood: Meanings and experiences among adults in Chile -- Consuelo Novoa, Gabriela Nazar, Felix Cova, German Lagos-Sepulveda, Adis Lopez-Bauta
NCFR member journal subscribers can access articles by logging into their NCFR account.
Learn more about NCFR's scholarly journals prior to submitting your manuscript.
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NCFR is a nonpartisan, 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization whose members support all families through research, teaching, practice, and advocacy.
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Original text here: https://www.ncfr.org/news/online-now-new-ncfr-journal-research
[Category: Sociological]
Feinstein Institutes Research Unlocks Two Distinct Paths to Severe Fetal Anemia, Revealing New Therapeutic Targets
NEW HYDE PARK, New York, May 5 -- Northwell Health issued the following news release:
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Feinstein Institutes research unlocks two distinct paths to severe fetal anemia, revealing new therapeutic targets
The study, published in Nature Communications, unravels mysteries of rare blood disorder
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A new study led by scientists at Northwell Health's Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research has revealed that defects in different ribosomal proteins lead to a rare blood disorder called Diamond-Blackfan anemia syndrome (DBAS) through surprisingly different pathways. This discovery helps explain
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NEW HYDE PARK, New York, May 5 -- Northwell Health issued the following news release:
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Feinstein Institutes research unlocks two distinct paths to severe fetal anemia, revealing new therapeutic targets
The study, published in Nature Communications, unravels mysteries of rare blood disorder
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A new study led by scientists at Northwell Health's Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research has revealed that defects in different ribosomal proteins lead to a rare blood disorder called Diamond-Blackfan anemia syndrome (DBAS) through surprisingly different pathways. This discovery helps explainwhy patients with DBAS can experience varied symptoms and could lead to more personalized treatments.
DBAS is a serious congenital disorder where the body struggles to produce enough red blood cells, causing severe anemia. It's often linked to problems with ribosomal proteins (RPs), which are essential for making new proteins in every cell. However, issues with specific RPs may lead to such severe blood cell problems and why the disorder varies among patients has been a long-standing puzzle for doctors and scientists.
Published in Nature Communications and led by Lionel Blanc, PhD, professor in the Institute of Molecular Medicine at the Feinstein Institutes and Les Nelkin Professor of Pediatric Oncology, the research team used advanced mouse models to study two different ribosomal proteins often implicated in DBAS: RPS19 and RPL5. While both problems resulted in severe anemia in the animal models, they affected developing blood cells in very different ways:
* RPS19 problems: Caused a drastic reduction in early blood-forming stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs). These vital starter cells for all blood production died off through a process called apoptosis, which is like a cell's programmed self-destruct sequence. This was also linked to an increase in a gene called RUNX1.
* RPL5 problems: Did not harm the early blood-forming cells as much. Instead, the issues arose later in the development of red blood cells. These more mature red blood cell precursors died off through a different, more chaotic process called ferroptosis, which involves excessive iron and oxidative stress.
Unlocking tailored treatments for Diamond-Blackfan anemia syndrome (DBAS)
Both types of RP problems activated p53, a critical guardian gene in cells that can stop growth or trigger cell death if something is wrong. Interestingly, the researchers found that simply removing p53 could rescue the blood production in both mouse models, but through different mechanisms. This suggests that p53 acts as a key player, but the specific RP defect steers the p53 response towards either apoptosis or ferroptosis, depending on the cell type and stage of development.
"This study provides crucial insights into the complex biology of DBAS," said Dr. Blanc. "By understanding these distinct pathways of cell death and the roles of genes like RUNX1, we can begin to think about developing more precise and effective treatments tailored to the specific genetic defect in each patient."
The findings, which also confirmed similar elevated RUNX1 levels in human DBAS patients with RPS gene mutations, mark a significant step forward in understanding how ribosomal proteins regulate blood cell development and contribute to disease pathogenesis. This detailed mechanistic understanding could pave the way for future therapies that target these specific pathways.
"Dr. Blanc and his colleague's research is an example of how understanding fundamental biology can unlock mysteries in complex diseases," said Kevin J. Tracey, MD, president and CEO of the Feinstein Institutes, Karches Family Distinguished Chair in Medical Research. "By showing that different ribosomal protein defects lead to distinct cellular death pathways in Diamond-Blackfan Anemia, they are building a roadmap to develop precise, personalized treatments for patients suffering from this rare blood disorder."
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Original text here: https://feinstein.northwell.edu/news/the-latest/feinstein-institutes-research-unlocks-two-distinct-paths-to-severe-fetal-anemia
[Category: Health Care]
Environmental Defense Fund: Midwestern Families on the Hook for $180 Million to Keep Michigan Coal Plant Open Under Trump Administration's Mandates
NEW YORK, May 5 -- The Environmental Defense Fund posted the following news release on May 4, 2026:
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Midwestern families on the hook for $180 million to keep Michigan coal plant open under Trump administration's mandates
EDF Statement from Ted Kelly, Director and Lead Counsel for U.S. Clean Energy
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(WASHINGTON, D.C.) New filings from Consumers Energy show that consumers will be on the hook for $180 million in additional costs (and counting) as a result of the Trump administration's mandates to continue operating the J.H. Campbell coal plant past its May 2025 retirement. Consumers Energy
... Show Full Article
NEW YORK, May 5 -- The Environmental Defense Fund posted the following news release on May 4, 2026:
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Midwestern families on the hook for $180 million to keep Michigan coal plant open under Trump administration's mandates
EDF Statement from Ted Kelly, Director and Lead Counsel for U.S. Clean Energy
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(WASHINGTON, D.C.) New filings from Consumers Energy show that consumers will be on the hook for $180 million in additional costs (and counting) as a result of the Trump administration's mandates to continue operating the J.H. Campbell coal plant past its May 2025 retirement. Consumers Energyis seeking to recover these ballooning costs - which cover the plant's operations as of March 31, 2026 - from ratepayers in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin.
The aging, highly polluting J.H. Campbell coal plant was scheduled to retire May 31, 2025, as part of a plan approved by state regulators to replace the plant with cleaner and cheaper resources. The Department of Energy upended these plans last May by issuing a last-minute emergency order to keep the plant running for 90 days past the retirement date. That order has now been re-issued three times, bringing the total extension to 360 days--almost a full year longer than planned. According to Consumers' filing, families have already paid $221 million for electricity from the plant over the past year through the regional electricity market. With Consumers Energy seeking to recover $180 million in losses from operating the plant under the emergency orders, the total cost to families now exceeds $400 million.
"Families are getting double-billed to prop up a worn-out, polluting coal plant they don't need and they can't afford," said Ted Kelly, Director and Lead Counsel, U.S. Clean Energy at Environmental Defense Fund. "On top of these outrageous costs to people's bills, the Campbell plant is still spewing out toxic air and water pollution that damages the health of surrounding communities."
In total, the Trump administration has extended five coal plants in Michigan, Indiana, Colorado and Washington past their retirement dates, as well as a gas and oil plant in Pennsylvania. The two extended Indiana coal plants are within the same regional electricity market (known as MISO) as Campbell, so ratepayers in the Midwest will pay for their extensions as well.
"It's been nearly a year since the Trump administration began illegally keeping coal plants open past retirement - and all it's done is drive up costs. Families are paying higher bills and breathing more toxic pollution from aging, unreliable coal plants that aren't even running or working half the time," said Kelly.
Three states (Michigan, Minnesota and Illinois) and public interest groups have challenged the administration's illegal Campbell coal plant order in the DC Circuit Court of Appeals, with oral arguments scheduled for May 15. The public interest groups argue that the Department of Energy is misusing its emergency powers as a tool for long-term grid planning, keeping coal plants open indefinitely, rather than addressing actual near-term electricity shortfalls.
Many of the extended coal plants have ended up failing or have not been needed to run at all, undermining the Department of Energy's claim that they are "essential" to reliability. New financial filings just revealed that the extended Centralia coal plant in Washington state will cost ratepayers in the Pacific Northwest $20 million, even though it did not generate electricity during the supposed "emergency" period.
In other instances, these coal plants have failed: The J.H. Campbell plant itself partially failed last summer during soaring temperatures, one Indiana unit has been down since July 2025 and one unit of the Craig plant in Colorado was down in January of this year.
Coal plants break down more than any other type of electricity in the United States (according to the North American Reliability Corporation), and an independent report from Grid Strategies found that if the Trump administration issues more mandates to keep aging coal power plants online, it could cost U.S. electricity consumers as much as $6 billion per year.
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With more than 3 million members, Environmental Defense Fund creates transformational solutions to the most serious environmental problems. To do so, EDF links science, economics, law, and innovative private-sector partnerships to turn solutions into action. edf.org
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Original text here: https://www.edf.org/media/midwestern-families-hook-180-million-keep-michigan-coal-plant-open-under-trump
[Category: Environment]
Civil Rights Groups File Emergency Federal Challenge to Louisiana Officials' Attempt to Suspend Election Already Underway
WASHINGTON, May 5 [Category: Political] -- The League of Women Voters issued the following news release on May 4, 2026:
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Civil Rights Groups File Emergency Federal Challenge to Louisiana Officials' Attempt to Suspend Election Already Underway
BATON ROUGE, LA -- A group of individual voters, the League of Women Voters of Louisiana, and the League of Women Voters of Louisiana Education Fund today filed an emergency lawsuit in federal court seeking to block Secretary of State Nancy Landry's implementation of Governor Jeff Landry's unlawful executive order that attempts to suspend Louisiana's
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, May 5 [Category: Political] -- The League of Women Voters issued the following news release on May 4, 2026:
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Civil Rights Groups File Emergency Federal Challenge to Louisiana Officials' Attempt to Suspend Election Already Underway
BATON ROUGE, LA -- A group of individual voters, the League of Women Voters of Louisiana, and the League of Women Voters of Louisiana Education Fund today filed an emergency lawsuit in federal court seeking to block Secretary of State Nancy Landry's implementation of Governor Jeff Landry's unlawful executive order that attempts to suspend Louisiana'scongressional House primary elections after voting had already begun.
Secretary Landry's action seeks to discard Louisiana's congressional map in a manner that disenfranchises tens of thousands of Louisiana voters who have already voted. Plaintiffs are represented by the American Civil Liberties Union, ACLU of Louisiana, Legal Defense Fund, and the Harvard Law School Race and Law Clinic.
Plaintiffs and counsel released the following joint statement:
"This illegal executive order threatens the integrity of our democratic system and disregards the voices of voters who have already participated in the May primary election in good faith. By attempting to suspend an ongoing election, state officials are creating confusion, undermining public trust, and placing partisan interests above the constitutional rights of Louisiana voters. Black voters and communities that have long fought for equal political representation should not be forced to bear the burden of unlawful power grabs designed to silence their voices. Elections belong to the people -- not to politicians seeking to manipulate the rules."
The executive order follows the US Supreme Court's recent decision in Louisiana v. Callais, which eviscerated federal protections for voters of color and struck down Louisiana's congressional map that had provided Black voters a meaningful opportunity to elect candidates of their choice.
The complaint is here (https://www.lwv.org/sites/default/files/2026-05/5.4.26%20Bernard-v.-Landry-Complaint-.pdf).
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Original text here: https://www.lwv.org/newsroom/press-releases/civil-rights-groups-file-emergency-federal-challenge-louisiana-officials
Americans for Tax Reform: Governor McKee Seeks to Reinstate Costly and Wasteful Truck-Only Toll Program
WASHINGTON, May 5 -- Americans for Tax Reform posted the following commentary on May 4, 2026, by Jack Guidi:
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Governor McKee Seeks to Reinstate Costly and Wasteful Truck-Only Toll Program
Despite claiming "affordability" as a key theme of his reelection campaign, Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee's legislative proposals in the 2026 session tell a far different story.
As part of the Governor's budget proposal, he's calling for a one-time reduction in the 2-cent motor fuel hike enacted by the General Assembly last year. While this move on its own may seem like an opportunity to let Rhode Islanders
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, May 5 -- Americans for Tax Reform posted the following commentary on May 4, 2026, by Jack Guidi:
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Governor McKee Seeks to Reinstate Costly and Wasteful Truck-Only Toll Program
Despite claiming "affordability" as a key theme of his reelection campaign, Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee's legislative proposals in the 2026 session tell a far different story.
As part of the Governor's budget proposal, he's calling for a one-time reduction in the 2-cent motor fuel hike enacted by the General Assembly last year. While this move on its own may seem like an opportunity to let Rhode Islanderspay less at the pump, the impact is dwarfed by other aspects of his proposal.
Specifically, his budget proposal calls for reinstating truck-only tolls, a program that was put on hold in 2022 after being struck down by a District Court judge. Fiscal estimates show that reinstatement of these tolls will cost $10 million in the 2027 fiscal year and would be even higher at $40 million annually thereafter.
The foundation of the US economy is trucking. Daily restocking of grocery stores, next-day delivery services, manufacturing, hospital equipment, etc. Our modern economy is built on the backs of tractor trailers. Increasing the costs they pay, at a time when Americans are already struggling with higher prices no less, will only lead to higher prices and increased costs for consumers.
These tolls were meant to serve as a means to fund infrastructure yet results from the years in which the program was active show the program is costly and inefficient. According to recent analysis from Anchor Rising, between 2018 and 2022 the toll program cost the state nearly $74 million to operate. It brought in an estimated $96 million, netting the state roughly $22 million in revenue. However, roughly 77% of this money went right back into paying for the program's operating expenses. The state was left with a measly $5 million for infrastructure projects, what was said to be the primary purpose of implementing the program in the first place.
This is to say nothing of the legal fees and continued operating expenses the state took on as the program was on hold.
The truck toll program has been a costly boondoggle for Rhode Island. Governor McKee is trying to soften the blow of higher costs through a one-time reduction of the gas tax. This token reduction in fuel tax is inconsequential when compared to the increased costs that all Rhode Islanders will feel if uncapped, truck-tolls are reinstated.
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Original text here: https://atr.org/governor-mckee-seeks-to-reinstate-costly-and-wasteful-truck-only-toll-program/
[Category: Political]
Whitehead AI Fellow Na Sun Receives a National Institutes of Health Director's Early Independence Award
CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts, May 5 -- The Whitehead Institute issued the following news:
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Whitehead AI Fellow Na Sun receives a National Institutes of Health Director's Early Independence Award
Whitehead Institute AI Fellow Na Sun has received a 2026 NIH Director's Early Independence Award, which will support her research using artificial intelligence to study how cells communicate across tissues and organs in health and disease.
At Whitehead Institute, Sun develops advanced computational methods to analyze large-scale biological datasets and decode how cells interact in living tissues. Her
... Show Full Article
CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts, May 5 -- The Whitehead Institute issued the following news:
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Whitehead AI Fellow Na Sun receives a National Institutes of Health Director's Early Independence Award
Whitehead Institute AI Fellow Na Sun has received a 2026 NIH Director's Early Independence Award, which will support her research using artificial intelligence to study how cells communicate across tissues and organs in health and disease.
At Whitehead Institute, Sun develops advanced computational methods to analyze large-scale biological datasets and decode how cells interact in living tissues. Herwork integrates machine-learning models with targeted genetic experiments to identify key communication pathways between cells and test how specific genetic changes alter gene activity, molecular and cell behaviors, particularly in brain disorders.
The Early Independence Award will support the continued development of Sun's computational frameworks, as well as experiments designed to connect cell-cell communication to tissue organization and disease-associated genetic variation.
A component of the National Institutes of Health's High-Risk, High-Reward Research program, the Early Independence Award is granted to a small number of exceptionally promising early-career scientists, providing $250,000 per year in direct research funding for five years to launch fully independent research programs at an early stage of their careers.
"This funding and support will give our lab more flexibility to pursue ambitious ideas that we are genuinely excited about," Sun says. "Receiving this award gave me confidence to develop new directions while continuing to build on our existing projects with renewed energy."
Sun earned a bachelor's degree in life science and a master's degree in bioinformatics and developmental biology before completing her PhD in computer science at MIT, where she focused on computational biology. She established her lab at Whitehead Institute in 2024 as its inaugural AI Fellow.
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The Sun Lab is developing advanced machine learning models to study communication between cells.
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Original text here: https://wi.mit.edu/news/whitehead-ai-fellow-na-sun-receives-national-institutes-health-director-s-early-independence
[Category: Healthcare]