1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
Data, AI, and Community Research Grant Program is sponsored by Tulane Connolly Alexander Institute for Data Science (CAIDS). CAIDS offers faculty and advanced graduate students opportunities to apply for grant funding to support academic enrichment, research, and community engagement that uses data and artificial intelligence methodologies or is about data and artificial intelligence topics.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “Tulane Connolly Alexander Institute for Data Science (CAIDS)” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Faculty and advanced graduate students at Tulane University. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Data, AI, and Community Research Grant Program is funded by Tulane Connolly Alexander Institute for Data Science (CAIDS). 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
California's Senate passed a $12 billion research bond 29-9 on May 27. If the Assembly clears it and Gov. Newsom signs by June 25, voters decide in November whether a new state foundation will fund grants where Washington pulled back.
Read articleThe NSF FY 2026-2030 Strategic Plan reorganizes the agency around three goals, names AI, quantum, and biotech as the critical technologies, codifies Gold Standard Science, and explicitly targets applicant burden. The implications for proposal strategy are bigger than they look.
Read articleA new Partnership for Public Service report documents 118,000 science-related federal departures between September 2024 and February 2026 — Forest Service and NSF down a third, SAMHSA down 42 percent. Project grant obligations from science agencies dropped 24 percent from 2024 to 2025. On June 3, Johns Hopkins announced a $60M annual Research Resilience Fund. Here is what the data and the institutional response mean for grant applicants.
Read article