The National Library of Medicine is part of the United States government and its employees are not allowed to apply for funds from the National Science Foundation or any other sources. However, a comparison to university funding that might have been obtained can be estimated by looking at the resources which Rada controlled. Rada was able to maintain the equivalent of about 4 full-time research staff and 12 production staff. The salaries of the research staff would be about $70 thousand per annum. The partial control of multi-million dollar funded projects, such as the Unified Medical Language System project, provided Rada control over say $100 thousand per annum of research funding. Thus Rada's research budget was $170 thousand per annum for the period 1984-1988 or a total of $680 thousand.
The Commission of the European Communities is the administrative unit of the European Economic Community (EEC) and in an effort to unite Europe is collecting taxes for research and re-distributing them after very competitive peer-review to research and development consortia. This EEC funding is comparable in Europe to what NSF funding in the USA might be. In his first year in England Rada succeeded in leading a consortium in winning an EEC research grant to develop an intelligent document retrieval system.
In 1990-91 Rada also acquired several small contracts with the EEC, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and the University of Liverpool. The EEC contract was to develop thesauri. The NATO grant was for numerous trips between Liverpool and Montreal for researchers to collaborate across sites. The University of Liverpool awarded Rada a New Professor's Fund for research staff.
In 1992 Rada became involved in a large EEC project on software reuse. This project brought $140 thousand to the University of Liverpool. One of the partners in the project was Asea Brown Boveri research laboratories in Heidelberg, Germany. Asea Brown Boveri then provided Rada's group an additional research grant.
In summary form, the grants received during the 1988-1992 period are:
The total funding for this period is $540 thousand.
The work with the EEC Distance Education program coincided with an emphasis in Rada's group on courseware development.
Educational technology can be particularly easily applied in a computer science environment. Applying this technology to the rather different health care environment gives another perspective on its utility. Rada's group explored the application of educational technology both in the university and within the broad health care environment:
These various projects have related to the broader interest of Rada's research group in the role of groupware and hypermedia in helping people. The total funding to the University of Liverpool between 1992 and 1995 was $699 thousand.
Between September 1996 and May 1996, Rada was the Virtual University Academic Officer. This position entailed considerable administrative work and was in some ways like his work 10 years earlier at the National Library of Medicine. For instance, he operated as a kind of project officer for external donations to be distributed by competitive bid within Washington State University. The resources to be thusly distributed were worth about $1 million. Rada was also provided part-time staff to help manage the project.
In the summer of 1996 NSF awarded a $51k grant to Mohammed Osman, Pat Flynn, and Roy Rada for educational technology for a "Solid State Device Animation Laboratory".
In January 1997 Rada assumed co-principal position in a 18-month contract worth $500,000+ from the Paul Allen Virtual Education Foundation.