Grants Database

The Foundation awards approximately 200 grants per year (excluding the Sloan Research Fellowships), totaling roughly $80 million dollars in annual commitments in support of research and education in science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and economics. This database contains grants for currently operating programs going back to 2008. For grants from prior years and for now-completed programs, see the annual reports section of this website.

Grants Database

Grantee
Amount
City
Year
  • grantee: New York University
    amount: $1,500,000
    city: New York, NY
    year: 2013

    To advance data-intensive scientific discovery through new methods, new tools, new partnerships, and new career paths

    • Program Technology
    • Sub-program Data & Computational Research
    • Investigator Yann LeCun

    While data science is already contributing to scientific discovery, substantial systemic challenges need to be overcome to maximize its impact on academic research. This is one of three grants, made as part of a five-year, $37.8 million partnership with the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, that aim to empower natural and social scientists by strengthening the ability of select U.S. colleges and universities to successfully conduct data-rich and computationally intensive research. Over the next three years, supported campuses will use grant funds to develop meaningful and sustained interactions between disciplinary researchers in the natural and social sciences (e.g. astrophysics, genetics, economics) and researchers in the methodological fields that deal with large scale data collection and analysis (e.g. applied mathematics, statistics, computer science). In addition, supported campuses will establish long term, sustainable career paths for data scientists, and develop an ecosystem of analytical tools and research practices that will facilitate effective research across a range of diverse scientific disciplines. Additional funded activities include holding workshops and training sessions for scientists who work with data, identifying data-science bottlenecks faced by researchers, and disseminating lessons-learned to the academic and research communities.

    To advance data-intensive scientific discovery through new methods, new tools, new partnerships, and new career paths

    More
  • grantee: University of Washington
    amount: $1,500,000
    city: Seattle, WA
    year: 2013

    To advance data-intensive scientific discovery through new methods, new tools, new partnerships, and new career paths

    • Program Technology
    • Sub-program Data & Computational Research
    • Investigator Edward Lazowska

    While data science is already contributing to scientific discovery, substantial systemic challenges need to be overcome to maximize its impact on academic research. This is one of three grants, made as part of a five-year, $37.8 million partnership with the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, that aim to empower natural and social scientists by strengthening the ability of select U.S. colleges and universities to successfully conduct data-rich and computationally intensive research. Over the next three years, supported campuses will use grant funds to develop meaningful and sustained interactions between disciplinary researchers in the natural and social sciences (e.g. astrophysics, genetics, economics) and researchers in the methodological fields that deal with large scale data collection and analysis (e.g. applied mathematics, statistics, computer science). In addition, supported campuses will establish long term, sustainable career paths for data scientists, and develop an ecosystem of analytical tools and research practices that will facilitate effective research across a range of diverse scientific disciplines. Additional funded activities include holding workshops and training sessions for scientists who work with data, identifying data-science bottlenecks faced by researchers, and disseminating lessons-learned to the academic and research communities.

    To advance data-intensive scientific discovery through new methods, new tools, new partnerships, and new career paths

    More
  • grantee: University of California, Berkeley
    amount: $1,500,000
    city: Berkeley, CA
    year: 2013

    To advance data-intensive scientific discovery through new methods, new tools, new partnerships, and new career paths

    • Program Technology
    • Sub-program Data & Computational Research
    • Investigator Saul Perlmutter

    While data science is already contributing to scientific discovery, substantial systemic challenges need to be overcome to maximize its impact on academic research. This is one of three grants, made as part of a five-year, $37.8 million partnership with the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, that aim to empower natural and social scientists by strengthening the ability of select U.S. colleges and universities to successfully conduct data-rich and computationally intensive research. Over the next three years, supported campuses will use grant funds to develop meaningful and sustained interactions between disciplinary researchers in the natural and social sciences (e.g. astrophysics, genetics, economics) and researchers in the methodological fields that deal with large scale data collection and analysis (e.g. applied mathematics, statistics, computer science). In addition, supported campuses will establish long term, sustainable career paths for data scientists, and develop an ecosystem of analytical tools and research practices that will facilitate effective research across a range of diverse scientific disciplines. Additional funded activities include holding workshops and training sessions for scientists who work with data, identifying data-science bottlenecks faced by researchers, and disseminating lessons-learned to the academic and research communities.

    To advance data-intensive scientific discovery through new methods, new tools, new partnerships, and new career paths

    More
  • grantee: Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
    amount: $600,001
    city: Washington, DC
    year: 2013

    To work with government, emergent distributed networks, and other stakeholders to make mass collaboration for data collection, analysis, and problem-solving more trustworthy, efficient, and actionable

    • Program Technology
    • Sub-program Data & Computational Research
    • Investigator Lea Shanley

    While citizen science projects, crowdsourcing, and other forms of mass collaboration on the Web hold the promise to contribute significantly to scientific research, they often lack adequate institutional or systemic controls to properly mitigate data privacy, cybersecurity, legal, and financial risks. Without such controls in place, government entities or other large institutions are often barred from collaborating with citizen science initiatives, limiting their usefulness and impact. This grant supports efforts by the Commons Lab at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars to help reduce these barriers by identifying, assessing and prioritizing the risks associated with mass collaboration projects and developing standards, policies, best practices, and other resources that both government agencies and citizen entrepreneurs can use to work together more effectively. Over the next two years, the Wilson Center will publish two peer-reviewed journal articles on privacy, human subjects, and intellectual property issues; host a roundtable series on cybersecurity; construct an inventory of U.S. government involvement in mass collaboration projects; hold a policy briefing for government agencies; and analyze governance models for mass collaboration projects.

    To work with government, emergent distributed networks, and other stakeholders to make mass collaboration for data collection, analysis, and problem-solving more trustworthy, efficient, and actionable

    More
  • grantee: Council on Foreign Relations
    amount: $1,114,059
    city: New York, NY
    year: 2013

    To conduct a program of research and publication on energy, economics, and international security, especially related to oil and gas

    • Program Research
    • Initiative Energy Security
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator James Lindsay

    This grant provides three years of continued support to the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) for its Project on Energy and National Security, a research initiative that focuses on increasing our understanding of issues at the intersection of energy, economics, and international security. Led by CFR’s Michael Levi, the project will examine a diverse array of issues, including how national oil companies make investment and production decisions, how infrastructure constraints cause divergence in regional oil prices, the economic and security implications of a significant drop in global oil prices, the consequences of the shifting trade in liquid fuels, and evaluating the effectiveness and consequences of international sanctions against petro-states. Additional grant funds support an annual workshop to discuss ongoing projects and findings, and outreach activities to engage policymakers, regulators, thought-leaders, industry, and the public.

    To conduct a program of research and publication on energy, economics, and international security, especially related to oil and gas

    More
  • grantee: Bipartisan Policy Center
    amount: $349,989
    city: Washington, DC
    year: 2013

    To build broad-based support from multiple stakeholder groups on options to address the nation’s nuclear waste challenges

    • Program Research
    • Initiative Nuclear Nonproliferation
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator Julie Anderson

    Funds from this grant support efforts by the Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC) to build broad-based support from multiple stakeholder groups on options to address the nation’s nuclear waste challenges. To guide the overall effort, BPC will convene a high-level advisory council to provide project direction and serve as representatives when meeting with congressional and executive branch leadership. The three-to-five-member advisory council will be composed primarily of former members of the Secretary of Energy’s Blue Ribbon Commission on America’s Nuclear Future and include individuals that span industry, nonproliferation, and environmental perspectives. Under the leadership of the advisory board, BPC will assess the level of support for and opposition to implementing the various proposals on nuclear waste management and disposal by hosting three full-day regional workshops, one in Washington and two elsewhere, to engage policymakers and stakeholders on the issues surrounding nuclear waste. Each workshop will begin with a brief stage-setting presentation by experts on the substance and status of the various proposals and then move to a structured discussion. Throughout the project, the BPC project team will also stand ready and, if requested, will assist legislators, regulators, and policy developers to better understand both technical and policy issues and stakeholders’ views.The project has been carefully designed to stay well clear of endorsing any particular policy proposal.

    To build broad-based support from multiple stakeholder groups on options to address the nation’s nuclear waste challenges

    More
  • grantee: University of Oxford
    amount: $80,000
    city: Oxford, United Kingdom
    year: 2013

    To organize an international workshop of early career scientists from around the world conducting research relevant to the Deep Carbon Observatory

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Deep Carbon Observatory
    • Investigator Christopher Ballentine

    To organize an international workshop of early career scientists from around the world conducting research relevant to the Deep Carbon Observatory

    More
  • grantee: Project Implicit, Inc.
    amount: $49,500
    city: Lexington, MA
    year: 2013

    To lay the necessary groundwork for a replication website initiative, aimed at increasing and disseminating replications

    • Program Technology
    • Sub-program Scholarly Communication
    • Investigator Stephanie Wykstra

    To lay the necessary groundwork for a replication website initiative, aimed at increasing and disseminating replications

    More
  • grantee: University of Colorado, Boulder
    amount: $30,000
    city: Boulder, CO
    year: 2013

    To examine the role of flood damage and recovery to house-associated microbial communities

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Microbiology of the Built Environment
    • Investigator Noah Fierer

    To examine the role of flood damage and recovery to house-associated microbial communities

    More
  • grantee: Third Sector New England Inc
    amount: $125,000
    city: Boston, MA
    year: 2013

    To test hypotheses with as much statistical power as a randomized controlled trial but with smaller control and treatment groups

    • Program Research
    • Initiative Empirical Economic Research Enablers (EERE)
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Jonathan Goodman

    To test hypotheses with as much statistical power as a randomized controlled trial but with smaller control and treatment groups

    More
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