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<principal-investigator> Principal Investigator
Individual(s) responsible for the intellectual content of the work reported in the
document.
Usage/Remarks
Multiple co-PIs can be included in successive <principal-investigator> elements.
The <principal-award-recipient> may or may not be the same as the <principal-investigator>, for example; a grant could be awarded to a Department or to individual A, and individual
B could serve as the Principal Investigator. When the same individual serves in both
roles, the name should be listed in both places.
Note that an <institution> may be included as a <principal-award-recipient>, but not as a <principal-investigator>.
Attributes
Multi-lang Attributes
Models and Context
May be contained in
Description
Any combination of:
- Text, numbers, or special characters
- <contrib-id> Contributor Identifier
- <name> Name of Person
- <name-alternatives> Name Alternatives
- <string-name> Name of Person (Unstructured)
Content Model
<!ELEMENT principal-investigator (#PCDATA %principal-investigator-elements;)* >
Expanded Content Model
(#PCDATA | contrib-id | name | name-alternatives | string-name)*
Tagged Sample
Award description
...
<article-meta>
...
<kwd-group kwd-group-type="author">...</kwd-group>
<funding-group>
<award-group id="NIA94" award-type="grant">
<funding-source>National Institute on Aging</funding-source>
<award-id>AG20962</award-id>
<principal-investigator>
<string-name><given-names>Sharon R.</given-names>
<surname>Kaufman</surname></string-name>
</principal-investigator>
</award-group>
<funding-statement><bold>Funding:</bold> The study upon which
this article is based was funded by the National Institute on
Aging under grant AG20962 (to SRK, principal investigator).
The funding source had no role in study design; collection,
analysis, and interpretation of data; writing of the paper;
or the decision to submit it for publication.</funding-statement>
</funding-group>
<counts>...</counts>
</article-meta>
...