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If your dean says that you shouldn't worry about it then it really doesn't sound like you're facing disciplinary action. It DOES sound like you burned a bridge with your PI but there's not much to be done about that now. Even your PI doesn't sound all that pissed about the lie (as per your description), it sounds more like he's pissed about the lost data/grant money. However if you're still scared about disciplinary action I'd say the key thing to do is to make sure you don't dig yourself a deeper hole while your waiting to see if anyone wants to take action against you. Don't lie to anyone else and don't get into a situation where you're going to get angry/emotional. If they actually bring you before the Dean then your goal is to minimize what you did whil at the same time showing them that it was a one time screw up and not a pattern of behavior.
Anyway take a deep breath. Odds are the worst part is already over.
You might have just cost your PI a $300K grant. I would just owe up to it and end it there. P.S. dragging your friend into this was not cool.
Yea I basically associate patient-data in a grant as being part of a huge study, so maybe $300K is actually a low ball average. I've seen clinical research grants go higher than that.Where'd you get that figure? Haha, my lab only procured like $20k grants. We were broke as hell. I had to write lab reports on a pentium 66.
Yea I basically associate patient-data in a grant as being part of a huge study, so maybe $300K is actually a low ball average. I've seen clinical research grants go higher than that.
I see you're from LA (and a Bruin), here's UCLA's grant info:
http://report.nih.gov/award/organiz...w=data&pagenum=1&sortcol=funding&sortdir=desc
I sorted by funding...ranges from $5 Mil to $10-20K, but you can kind of tell that the million dollar grants are for huge studies, probably collaborative, and probably involving patients.
That's definitely a more direct way to put it.So what you're saying basically is that this dude **** the bed.