Apply

New Grant Opportunities

NEA Our Town, FY2025

Funder: National Endowment for the Arts/National Foundation on the Arts & Humanities

Deadline: Aug. 1, 2024

Funding Level: Grants range from $25,000 to $150,000

Our Town is the NEA’s creative placemaking grants program. Through project-based funding, the program supports activities that integrate arts, culture, and design into local efforts that strengthen communities over the long term. Our Town projects engage a wide range of local stakeholders in efforts to advance local economic, physical, and/or social outcomes in communities. Competitive projects are responsive to unique local conditions, develop meaningful and substantive engagement in communities, center equity, advance artful lives, and lay the groundwork for long-term systems change.


Traumatic Brain Injury and Psychological Health Research Program

Funder:  Department of the Army/Department of Defense

Deadline:  Oct. 3, 2024

Funding Level:  Up to $5,000,000.00

The TBIPHRP’s vision is to optimize the prevention, assessment, and treatment of psychological health conditions and/or traumatic brain injuries (TBIs). The program seeks to fund research that understands, prevents, and treats psychological health conditions and/or traumatic brain injuries that accelerates solutions to improve the health and health care of Service Members, their Families, Veterans, and the American public. Proposed research can be aligned with TBI, psychological health, or in combination.  


Mathematical Foundations of Artificial Intelligence

Funder:  National Science Foundation

Deadline:  Oct. 10, 2024

Funding Level:  Up to $1,500,000.00 (USD) up to 36 months

The National Science Foundation Directorates for Mathematical and Physical Sciences (MPS), Computer and Information Science and Engineering (CISE), Engineering (ENG), and Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences (SBE) will jointly sponsor research collaborations consisting of mathematicians, statisticians, computer scientists, engineers, and social and behavioral scientists focused on the mathematical and theoretical foundations of AI. Research activities should focus on the most challenging mathematical and theoretical questions aimed at understanding the capabilities, limitations, and emerging properties of AI methods as well as the development of novel, and mathematically grounded, design and analysis principles for the current and next generation of AI approaches.


For more information, please reach out to the Office of Sponsored Programs at ospgrants@hartford.edu.