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: Open Collective Foundation
    amount: $648,000
    city: Walnut, CA
    year: 2021

    To develop open-source software that facilitates widespread adoption of privacy-preserving methods in artificial intelligence

    • Program Research
    • Initiative Economic Analysis of Science and Technology (EAST)
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Andrew Trask

    Funds from this grant provide support for OpenMined, an online community of nearly 12,000 members from academia, industry, and government devoted to advancing privacy-preserving research methods in machine learning and AI development.   The OpenMined community is creating an ecosystem of advanced but accessible cryptographic tools designed to allow machine learning researchers to probe sensitive datasets without the need to copy, move or share any data.  Resources available on the OpenMined website (OpenMined.org) include a beginner’s guide, free classes and tutorials in a dozen languages, blogs and lectures from leading researchers in privacy-preserving research, and open-source coding repositories and projects on such topics as remote execution and federated learning, differential privacy, encrypted computation, and secure natural language processing.  Grant funds provide core operating support for the continued operation and expansion of the OpenMined community for a period of two years.

    To develop open-source software that facilitates widespread adoption of privacy-preserving methods in artificial intelligence

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  • grantee: National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
    amount: $725,614
    city: Cambridge, MA
    year: 2021

    To investigate and experiment with alternative peer-review methods for selecting among scientific research proposals

    • Program Research
    • Initiative Economic Analysis of Science and Technology (EAST)
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Paula Stephan

    Funding decisions by the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health are based on a process of peer review where independent subject-matter experts are invited to rate and rank potential research projects along a number of criteria, including the importance of the issue being examined, the strength of the experimental design, the likelihood of success, and the qualifications of the research team.  Projects that review well are funded.  Those that review poorly are not.  The budgets of just those two institutions total some $50 billion dollars per year—the lion’s share of basic research funding in the U.S.—so a lot rides on whether the peer review process is a good way to identify and select promising research projects.  This grant funds a series of projects led by Paula Stephan, Professor of Economics at Georgia State University and Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and Chiara Franzoni, Associate Professor at the School of Management at Milan Polytechnic University, to rigorously study peer review when used as a grant allocation process.  Stephan and Franzoni will partner with Novo Nordisk, a Danish foundation that has been funding research to combat diabetes since 1923 and that has kept meticulous records of its peer review and funding decisions.  This unique longitudinal dataset will allow the research team to compare the initial judgements of reviewers with the eventual successes of both funded and unfunded projects.  Second, Stephan and Franzoni have designed a series of experiments that will set up peer review panels with different decision structures and racial and gender compositions and give each panel the same set of research proposals to rate, giving the team some evidence of how structure and composition affect the verdicts of peer review committees.  Third, the team has assembled a small cohort of foundations that are willing to experiment with doing away with parts of the peer review altogether, introducing randomness at different stages of the selection process from a pool of proposals that meet certain base quality criteria.  These three separate initiatives will be supplemented alongside a host of qualitative and quantitative interviews that probe experts about the peer review process and their own judgements about its efficacy.

    To investigate and experiment with alternative peer-review methods for selecting among scientific research proposals

    More
  • grantee: Volcker Alliance
    amount: $149,993
    city: New York, NY
    year: 2021

    To improve public sector workforce recruiting practices and enhance diversity, particularly in STEM fields, by applying and testing insights from behavioral economics

    • Program Research
    • Initiative Behavioral and Regulatory Effects on Decision-making (BRED)
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Michael Hallsworth

    To improve public sector workforce recruiting practices and enhance diversity, particularly in STEM fields, by applying and testing insights from behavioral economics

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  • grantee: National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
    amount: $44,000
    city: Cambridge, MA
    year: 2021

    To support collaborations between academic economists and policy-makers on economic questions of critical importance related to the COVID-19 pandemic

    • Program Research
    • Initiative Behavioral and Regulatory Effects on Decision-making (BRED)
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Kosali Simon

    To support collaborations between academic economists and policy-makers on economic questions of critical importance related to the COVID-19 pandemic

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  • grantee: University of Pennsylvania
    amount: $125,516
    city: Philadelphia, PA
    year: 2021

    To study labor markets where a dominant employer has monopsony power over hiring terms and practices

    • Program Research
    • Initiative Economic Analysis of Science and Technology (EAST)
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Ioana Marinescu

    To study labor markets where a dominant employer has monopsony power over hiring terms and practices

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  • grantee: University of Toronto
    amount: $249,100
    city: Toronto, Canada
    year: 2021

    To study causal and other learning in artificial and human intelligence by convening and coordinating experts in fields such as AI, game theory, philosophy, economics, and computer science

    • Program Research
    • Initiative Economic Analysis of Science and Technology (EAST)
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Michael Ryall

    To study causal and other learning in artificial and human intelligence by convening and coordinating experts in fields such as AI, game theory, philosophy, economics, and computer science

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  • grantee: National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
    amount: $200,000
    city: Cambridge, MA
    year: 2020

    To connect researchers and policymakers with reliable survey research about the pandemic, by collecting, vetting, and archiving these materials in a searchable online repository

    • Program Research
    • Initiative Economic Analysis of Science and Technology (EAST)
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Janet Currie

    To connect researchers and policymakers with reliable survey research about the pandemic, by collecting, vetting, and archiving these materials in a searchable online repository

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  • grantee: National Academy of Sciences
    amount: $50,000
    city: Washington, DC
    year: 2020

    To support the COVID-19-related activities of the Societal Experts Action Network, a network of leading social, behavioral, and economics researchers that facilitate rapid responses to actionable questions from decision-makers

    • Program Research
    • Initiative Behavioral and Regulatory Effects on Decision-making (BRED)
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Monica Feit

    To support the COVID-19-related activities of the Societal Experts Action Network, a network of leading social, behavioral, and economics researchers that facilitate rapid responses to actionable questions from decision-makers

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  • grantee: University of Colorado, Boulder
    amount: $41,762
    city: Boulder, CO
    year: 2020

    To develop guidance for policymakers on disaster preparedness, response, and recovery in light of the pandemic

    • Program Research
    • Initiative Economic Analysis of Science and Technology (EAST)
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Nnenia Campbell

    To develop guidance for policymakers on disaster preparedness, response, and recovery in light of the pandemic

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  • grantee: Texas A&M University
    amount: $49,839
    city: College Station, TX
    year: 2020

    To develop and evaluate a scalable mentoring program for diverse scholars early in their careers as economists

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Economics
    • Investigator Danila Serra

    To develop and evaluate a scalable mentoring program for diverse scholars early in their careers as economists

    More
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