Washington – The Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) Small
Business Innovation Research (SBIR) 23.1 Solicitation is now
open and accepting applications from U.S. small businesses interested
in submitting research proposals for seven diverse homeland security
technology needs.
“One of the best ways for small business to begin
partnering with DHS is with the non-dilutive funding through the SBIR
program, which is designed to engage them in federal research and
development,” said Dusty Lang, DHS SBIR Director. “Publishing the
annual solicitation is an exciting time for our program as we prepare
to foster new relationships with small businesses in support of the pursuit
of innovation.”
The solicitation is published on SAM.gov and
details the following topics:
- DHS231-001 - Accurate and
Real-time Hardware-assisted Detection of Cyber Attacks
- DHS231-002 - Air Cargo
Manifest Analysis to Aid Screeners
- DHS231-003 - First
Responder Credentialing
- DHS231-004 - Machine
Learning Based Integration of Alarm Resolution Sensors
- DHS231-005 - Mission
Critical Services Server-to-Server Communication, voice
communications, 3GPP-Standards
- DHS231-006 - Reduced Order
Modeling of Critical Infrastructure Protect Surfaces
- DHS231-007 - Theoretical
Classification Methodologies to Enable Detection with Predicted
Signatures
The DHS SBIR Program is a competitive contract awards
program that encourages agile and innovative U.S. small businesses to
participate in federal research and development projects, as well as
private sector commercialization of SBIR-funded solutions.
During the solicitation period, DHS will accept
proposals for topics until 1 PM ET on January 17, 2023. Proposals
must be submitted through the online proposal submission system
at: https://sbir.dhs.gov/sbir/public.
For more information about the DHS SBIR program,
the Deconstructing
SBIR webinar series offers more insights and information. Join
the mailing list to keep up to date on the latest news at: https://sbir.dhs.gov.
About DHS
S&T
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Science and
Technology Directorate (S&T) mission is to enable effective,
efficient, and secure operations across all homeland security
missions by applying scientific, engineering, analytic, and
innovative approaches to deliver timely solutions and support
departmental acquisitions. Created by Congress in 2003, S&T
conducts basic and applied research, development, demonstration,
testing and evaluation activities relevant to support Homeland
Security and first responder operations and protect critical
infrastructure. For more information about S&T, visit scitech.dhs.gov.
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