1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
Aging and Decision Neuroscience Research Pilot Grants (Scientific Research Network on Decision Neuroscience and Aging - SRNDNA) is sponsored by The University of Texas at Dallas (SRNDNA). These grants support research focused on the neural mechanisms of decision-making in adult development and aging or on life course decisions that improve health and well-being in old age.
Priority is given to projects related to Alzheimer's disease and Alzheimer's disease-related dementias (AD/ADRD). Funds are primarily for data collection and task development, or to add an older adult sample to an existing study.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “The University of Texas at Dallas (SRNDNA)” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Priority is given to graduate students, post-doctoral fellows, and junior faculty. Senior researchers new to the area will also be considered. Applicants must be at a U.S. institution and must not have received a major NIA grant focused on aging and decision-making in the past 3 years. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows up to $24,000 (total costs). Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
The published deadline was June 1, 2026, which has passed. Check the official notice for any future application windows before investing time in a proposal.
Aging and Decision Neuroscience Research Pilot Grants (Scientific Research Network on Decision Neuroscience and Aging - SRNDNA) is funded by The University of Texas at Dallas (SRNDNA). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
NIH's June 1 omnibus reset added Direct-to-Phase II to the STTR program for the first time. The change compresses university spinouts' funding timeline from three years to fifteen months, but the 30% research-institution subaward, feasibility-evidence rules, and IP licensing mechanics are not yet sorted at most universities.
Read articleDARPA and NSF launched a joint program on June 1 to fund university work on AI interpretability, control, and adversarial robustness. Awards run $750K to $3M+ per project, the forum launches this summer, and the universities listed in the AI Forge repository will sit closest to the money. The Request for Information closes June 22.
Read articleOn June 1, 2026, DARPA and the National Science Foundation announced AI Forge — a jointly governed forum that will fund, guide, and manage university-led research on AI interpretability, AI control, and adversarial robustness. The RFI on sam.gov closes June 22. The forum itself will be administered by a new nonprofit launching in summer 2026. The structure is what matters: this is not a one-off solicitation, it is a multi-year venue for university-government-industry research that operates outside the normal merit-review timelines of either agency. What university research teams should be doing in the seventeen-day window between the announcement and the RFI deadline — and what the forum model means for federal AI funding through FY 2028.
Read article