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{{Short description|Nonprofit scientific association}}
{{no footnotes|date=March 2013}}
{{more footnotes|date=March 2013}}
{{Infobox Organization
{{Infobox organization
|name = American Institute of Biological Sciences
| name = American Institute of Biological Sciences
|image =
| image =
|image_border =
|size =
| image_border =
|caption =
| size =
|map =
| caption =
|msize =
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|mcaption =
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|abbreviation = AIBS
|motto =
| abbreviation = AIBS
|formation = 1947
| motto =
|extinction =
| formation = 1947
|type = Non-profit
| extinction =
|status =
| type = Nonprofit
|purpose = [[Biology]] [[Biological Sciences]], and many other fields in [[Environmental science|Conservation]] and [[Biomedical]] sciences
| status =
| purpose = [[Biology]] [[Biological Sciences]], and many other fields in [[Environmental science|Conservation]] and [[Biomedical]] sciences
|headquarters = Washington, DC
| headquarters = Herndon, Virginia
|location =
| location =
|region_served = National
| region_served = National
|membership = Organizations and individuals
| membership = Organizations
|language =
| language =
|leader_title = President
| leader_title = President
|leader_name = Jim Collins, 2011
| leader_name = Charles Fenster, 2020
|main_organ =
| main_organ =
|parent_organization =
| parent_organization =
|affiliations =
| affiliations =
|num_staff = 45
| num_staff = 18
|num_volunteers = 65
| num_volunteers =
|budget =
| budget =
|website = http://www.aibs.org
| website = {{URL|https://www.aibs.org/}}
|remarks =
| remarks =
}}
}}


The '''American Institute of Biological Sciences''' ('''AIBS''') is a non-profit scientific association that is dedicated to advancing biological research and education.
The '''American Institute of Biological Sciences''' ('''AIBS''') is a [[nonprofit]] [[scientific]] public charitable organization. The organization's mission is to promote the use of science to inform decision-making and advance [[biology]] for the benefit of science and society.


==Overview==
==Overview==


AIBS serves as a society of societies. AIBS has over 115 member organizations and is headquartered in Herndon, VA. Its staff work to achieve its mission by publishing the peer-reviewed journal ''[[BioScience]]'', providing peer review and advisory support services for funding organizations, providing professional development for scientists and students, advocating for science policy and educating the public about biology. AIBS works with like-minded organizations, funding agencies, and nonprofit and for-profit entities to promote the use of science to inform decision-making.
The American Institute of Biological Sciences is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) scientific association dedicated to advancing biological research and education for the welfare of society. AIBS works to ensure that the public, legislators, funders, and the community of biologists have access to and use information that will guide them in making informed decisions about matters that require biological knowledge.


AIBS is governed by an esteemed Board of Directors and a Council of representatives of our member organizations.
Founded in 1947 as a part of the [[United States National Academy of Sciences|National Academy of Sciences]], AIBS became an independent, member-governed organization in the 1950s. Today, AIBS has nearly 160 member organizations and is headquartered in Reston, VA, with a Public Policy Office in Washington, DC. Its approximately 40 staff work to achieve its mission by publishing the peer-reviewed journal ''BioScience'' and the education Web site [[Actionbioscience|ActionBioScience.org]], providing scientific peer-review and advisory services to government agencies and other clients, and collaborating with scientific organizations to advance public policy, education, and the public understanding of science.


==Background and history==
AIBS provides scientific peer-review and advisory services to government agencies and other clients; publishes the peer-reviewed journal BioScience and the education Web site ActionBioScience.org; and collaborates with scientific organizations to advance public policy, education, and the public understanding of science.


AIBS was established in 1947 as a part of the [[National Academy of Sciences]]. The overarching goal was to unify the individuals and organizations that collectively represent the biological sciences, so that the community could address matters of common concern. In the 1950s, AIBS became an independent, member-governed, nonprofit 501(c)3 public charity scientific organization. The organization continues to work diligently to communicate biology to the scientific community, funders, policymakers, and other groups interested in exploring cross-cutting ideas in the biological sciences
==Scientific Peer Advisory and Review Services (SPARS)==
===Mission===
Scientific Peer Advisory and Review Services (SPARS) is a division of the non-profit entity, American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS), which is dedicated to biological research and education. SPARS is focused on the objective evaluation of potential research grant applications, ongoing medical research programs, and progress reports for numerous granting agencies, foundations, and research institutes; addressing advances in basic biology, clinical medicine, technology, and wildlife and environmental concerns.


===History and staff===
==Strategic priorities==
Performing peer review and related scientific services since 1963, AIBS SPARS is one of the longest-serving independent scientific review service providers in the nation. The staff at AIBS SPARS consists of scientists, administrators, IT professionals, writers, and editors.


AIBS works toward overarching outcomes through three strategic priorities:
===Processes===
SPARS works with the scientific community to match eminent, relevant scientists to highly specialized biomedical research applications. Reviewers are vetted for conflicts of interest and confidentiality is ensured to maintain the fidelity of the process. Processes include: developing request for proposals (RFPs), developing proposal receipt and tracking mechanisms, establishing review procedures, orchestrating online reviews, meetings, and teleconferences and delivering edited critiques. Many types of reviews have been implemented, including: consortia development, training and education programs, innovation awards, technology development awards, basic science and clinical trial awards.
* Scientific Peer Advisory and Review Services for research proposals and programs sponsored by funding organizations, including the federal government, state agencies, private research foundations, other non-government organizations and educate the community about the science of [[peer review]].
* Publications and Communications, including reliable reports, analyses, and the peer-reviewed journal BioScience, which is a forum for integrating the life sciences and educating the public about biological sciences.
* Community Programs that advance the field and profession of biology while promoting and providing leadership, with a particular emphasis on public policy and advocacy, education and professional development, as well as public awareness of science.


==Public policy==
==Core Activities==


The American Institute of Biological Sciences promotes the use of science to inform decision-making and advances biology for the benefit of science and society through:
The AIBS Public Policy Office works at the interface of science and public policy. The office, staffed by science policy and public affairs professionals, works to promote the use of biological sciences knowledge in our nation’s public policy and to develop and advance science policy that serves the needs of the scientific research and education communities, particularly the biological sciences. Issues addressed by the policy office are: funding for the biological sciences, scientific collections, science education, scientific integrity, and research and government agencies.


==Education and public programs==


AIBS is dedicated to improving biological science literacy at all levels of formal and informal education. AIBS works toward meeting this goal through a number of initiatives: recognizing teaching professionals, collaborating with other organizations, disseminating information, publishing teaching resources to improve biology education, and encouraging students to pursue careers in biology. AIBS also supports innovative programs that connect science to the public and that encourage a true appreciation of the value of the biological sciences to society.


●      '''Assessment'''. Coordinating and facilitating expert merit-based evaluation of research proposals, ongoing research programs, and completed research efforts, as well as analyzing merit-based peer-review activities sponsored by a diverse group of  research-funding organizations.
==Publications==


AIBS is committed to the effective communication of high-quality information about biology, both within the profession and to students, educators, and the greater public. To this end, it publishes the highly cited monthly journal ''[http://www.aibs.org/bioscience/ BioScience]'' and continually expands the content of its free, online, educational resource [http://www.ActionBioScience.org ActionBioScience.org]. ''[http://www.aibs.org/bioscience/ BioScience]'' provides peer-reviewed synthetic overviews of current biological research, together with articles about biology education, history, and the profession generally. It is strong in environmental and interdisciplinary science as well as integrative biology. ActionBioScience.org — an award-winning, bilingual Web site—connects the general public to societal issues that are informed by biological science through peer-reviewed articles, interviews, and other resources.


==External links==
* [http://www.aibs.org American Institute of Biological Sciences main web site]
* [http://www.aibs.org/bioscience/ BioScience journal]
* [http://www.aibs.org/peer-review/ AIBS SPARS Website]
* [http://www.actionbioscience.org/ ActionBioscience.org in English]
* [http://www.actionbioscience.org/esp/ ActionBioscience.org in Spanish]
* [http://www.aibs.org/about-aibs/resources/AIBS_50th_An_History.pdf History of AIBS]


●      '''Advocacy'''. Advancing biology through programs, partnerships, and advocacy with a particular emphasis on public policy that benefits and promotes the interests and diversity of the life sciences community and informed decision-making.



●      '''Training'''. Providing educational training programs to scientists that enhance their professional skills and opportunities, as well as improve their ability to engage and inform diverse audiences.

●      '''Communication'''. Convening communities, publishing, and sharing scientific information (through a variety of channels) with the breadth of the scientific community, decision-makers, and the public.

This work galvanizes the biology community and provides the knowledge required to solve problems of concern to society.

===Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion===

AIBS is committed to increasing [[diversity, equity, and inclusion]] (DEI) in the biological sciences. AIBS is focusing on the development and expansion of programs that center on our core activities of assessment, training, communication, and advocacy.


===Assessment===

====Scientific Peer Advisory and Review Services (SPARS)====

The Scientific Peer Advisory and Review Services (SPARS) department is focused on coordinating, facilitating, and promoting independent, equitable evaluation processes to inform decision-making.

AIBS SPARS partners with a diverse group of organizations that are focused on a wide variety of research and funding efforts. AIBS SPARS facilitates review/advisory support services to ensure thorough and structured assessment processes are performed by vetted, qualified experts.

AIBS SPARS staff are experts in review processes and advisory services, which are often provided for proposed research grants and progress reports, ongoing funded research programs / portfolios, retrospective impact analyses, and for advisory boards and committees.

====Science of Peer Review====

The empirical basis upon which peer review rests is limited. To build up this literature base, AIBS SPARS staff perform in-house research and meta-analyses on the peer review process and share results with the scientific community through publications and presentations.

===Advocacy===

====Public Policy Office====

The Public Policy Office works to educate policymakers about the importance of investing in biology and advocates for policies that serve the needs of researchers, educators, and other biological science professionals. Issues addressed by the office include but are not limited to: funding for the biological sciences; funding for research infrastructure, including scientific collections and field stations; strengthening science education policy; investing in the scientific workforce; and promoting scientific integrity and transparency.

===Training===

With over 2,600 people trained, AIBS provides training programs to scientists that enhance their professional skills and opportunities, as well as improve their ability to engage and inform diverse audiences. Workshops include:

* Employment Acquisition Skills Boot Camp for Scientists: Helping scientists hone and practice the skills needed to secure employment
* Writing for Impact and Influence: Helping scientists and graduate students hone their written communication skills to increase the impact and influence of their message
* Enabling Interdisciplinary and Team Science: Providing participants with the knowledge and skills required to become productive and effective members of scientific teams
* Communication Bootcamp: Helps the science community learn how to engage and inform decision-makers and have the opportunity to become effective and engaged communicators

===Communications===

====Faces of Biology Photo Contest====

AIBS conducts a yearly photo contest that helps communicate science through imagery. Photographs entered into the contest must depict a person, such as a scientist, researcher, collections curator, technician, or student, engaging in biological research. The depicted research may occur outside, in a lab, with a natural history collection, on a computer, in a classroom, or elsewhere.

====Publications====

AIBS publishes [[BioScience]], a peer-reviewed monthly journal with content written and edited for accessibility to researchers, educators, and students. The journal is heavily cited, with a 2021 Impact Factor of 11.687. AIBS also publishes BioScience Talks, a companion podcast to the journal.

BioScience includes articles about research findings and techniques, advances in biology education, professionally written feature articles about new developments in biology, discussions of professional issues, book reviews, news about AIBS, and a policy column (Washington Watch). Roundtables, forums, and viewpoint articles offer the perspectives of opinion leaders and invite further commentary.

{{reflist}}

==See also==
*''[[BioScience]]''

{{authority control}}


[[Category:Scientific organizations based in the United States]]
[[Category:Scientific organizations based in the United States]]
[[Category:Non-profit organizations based in Washington, D.C.]]
[[Category:Non-profit organizations based in Washington, D.C.]]
[[Category:Supraorganizations]]
[[Category:Scientific supraorganizations]]
[[Category:United States National Academy of Sciences]]
[[Category:United States National Academy of Sciences]]
[[Category:Peer review]]
[[Category:Peer review]]
[[Category:Academic publishing companies]]
[[Category:Non-profit academic publishers]]
[[Category:Biology organizations]]
[[Category:Biology organizations based in the United States]]
[[Category:Biology societies]]
[[Category:Biology societies]]
[[Category:Natural Science Collections Alliance members]]
[[Category:Natural Science Collections Alliance members]]

Latest revision as of 22:38, 11 October 2023

American Institute of Biological Sciences
AbbreviationAIBS
Formation1947
TypeNonprofit
PurposeBiology Biological Sciences, and many other fields in Conservation and Biomedical sciences
HeadquartersHerndon, Virginia
Region served
National
Membership
Organizations
President
Charles Fenster, 2020
Staff
18
Websitewww.aibs.org

The American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS) is a nonprofit scientific public charitable organization. The organization's mission is to promote the use of science to inform decision-making and advance biology for the benefit of science and society.

Overview

[edit]

AIBS serves as a society of societies. AIBS has over 115 member organizations and is headquartered in Herndon, VA. Its staff work to achieve its mission by publishing the peer-reviewed journal BioScience, providing peer review and advisory support services for funding organizations, providing professional development for scientists and students, advocating for science policy and educating the public about biology. AIBS works with like-minded organizations, funding agencies, and nonprofit and for-profit entities to promote the use of science to inform decision-making.

AIBS is governed by an esteemed Board of Directors and a Council of representatives of our member organizations.

Background and history

[edit]

AIBS was established in 1947 as a part of the National Academy of Sciences. The overarching goal was to unify the individuals and organizations that collectively represent the biological sciences, so that the community could address matters of common concern. In the 1950s, AIBS became an independent, member-governed, nonprofit 501(c)3 public charity scientific organization. The organization continues to work diligently to communicate biology to the scientific community, funders, policymakers, and other groups interested in exploring cross-cutting ideas in the biological sciences

Strategic priorities

[edit]

AIBS works toward overarching outcomes through three strategic priorities:

  • Scientific Peer Advisory and Review Services for research proposals and programs sponsored by funding organizations, including the federal government, state agencies, private research foundations, other non-government organizations and educate the community about the science of peer review.
  • Publications and Communications, including reliable reports, analyses, and the peer-reviewed journal BioScience, which is a forum for integrating the life sciences and educating the public about biological sciences.
  • Community Programs that advance the field and profession of biology while promoting and providing leadership, with a particular emphasis on public policy and advocacy, education and professional development, as well as public awareness of science.

Core Activities

[edit]

The American Institute of Biological Sciences promotes the use of science to inform decision-making and advances biology for the benefit of science and society through:


●      Assessment. Coordinating and facilitating expert merit-based evaluation of research proposals, ongoing research programs, and completed research efforts, as well as analyzing merit-based peer-review activities sponsored by a diverse group of  research-funding organizations.


●      Advocacy. Advancing biology through programs, partnerships, and advocacy with a particular emphasis on public policy that benefits and promotes the interests and diversity of the life sciences community and informed decision-making.


●      Training. Providing educational training programs to scientists that enhance their professional skills and opportunities, as well as improve their ability to engage and inform diverse audiences.

●      Communication. Convening communities, publishing, and sharing scientific information (through a variety of channels) with the breadth of the scientific community, decision-makers, and the public.

This work galvanizes the biology community and provides the knowledge required to solve problems of concern to society.

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

[edit]

AIBS is committed to increasing diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in the biological sciences. AIBS is focusing on the development and expansion of programs that center on our core activities of assessment, training, communication, and advocacy.


Assessment

[edit]

Scientific Peer Advisory and Review Services (SPARS)

[edit]

The Scientific Peer Advisory and Review Services (SPARS) department is focused on coordinating, facilitating, and promoting independent, equitable evaluation processes to inform decision-making.

AIBS SPARS partners with a diverse group of organizations that are focused on a wide variety of research and funding efforts. AIBS SPARS facilitates review/advisory support services to ensure thorough and structured assessment processes are performed by vetted, qualified experts.

AIBS SPARS staff are experts in review processes and advisory services, which are often provided for proposed research grants and progress reports, ongoing funded research programs / portfolios, retrospective impact analyses, and for advisory boards and committees.

Science of Peer Review

[edit]

The empirical basis upon which peer review rests is limited. To build up this literature base, AIBS SPARS staff perform in-house research and meta-analyses on the peer review process and share results with the scientific community through publications and presentations.

Advocacy

[edit]

Public Policy Office

[edit]

The Public Policy Office works to educate policymakers about the importance of investing in biology and advocates for policies that serve the needs of researchers, educators, and other biological science professionals. Issues addressed by the office include but are not limited to: funding for the biological sciences; funding for research infrastructure, including scientific collections and field stations; strengthening science education policy; investing in the scientific workforce; and promoting scientific integrity and transparency.

Training

[edit]

With over 2,600 people trained, AIBS provides training programs to scientists that enhance their professional skills and opportunities, as well as improve their ability to engage and inform diverse audiences. Workshops include:

  • Employment Acquisition Skills Boot Camp for Scientists: Helping scientists hone and practice the skills needed to secure employment
  • Writing for Impact and Influence: Helping scientists and graduate students hone their written communication skills to increase the impact and influence of their message
  • Enabling Interdisciplinary and Team Science: Providing participants with the knowledge and skills required to become productive and effective members of scientific teams
  • Communication Bootcamp: Helps the science community learn how to engage and inform decision-makers and have the opportunity to become effective and engaged communicators

Communications

[edit]

Faces of Biology Photo Contest

[edit]

AIBS conducts a yearly photo contest that helps communicate science through imagery. Photographs entered into the contest must depict a person, such as a scientist, researcher, collections curator, technician, or student, engaging in biological research. The depicted research may occur outside, in a lab, with a natural history collection, on a computer, in a classroom, or elsewhere.

Publications

[edit]

AIBS publishes BioScience, a peer-reviewed monthly journal with content written and edited for accessibility to researchers, educators, and students. The journal is heavily cited, with a 2021 Impact Factor of 11.687. AIBS also publishes BioScience Talks, a companion podcast to the journal.

BioScience includes articles about research findings and techniques, advances in biology education, professionally written feature articles about new developments in biology, discussions of professional issues, book reviews, news about AIBS, and a policy column (Washington Watch). Roundtables, forums, and viewpoint articles offer the perspectives of opinion leaders and invite further commentary.

See also

[edit]