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The Schmidt Sciences Humanities and Artificial Intelligence Virtual Institute (HAVI) funds interdisciplinary research teams developing and applying new AI techniques to accelerate humanities scholarship.
The 2026 Development Awards support projects that pair AI researchers with humanities scholars working in archaeology, history, literary analysis, dance, environmental humanities, manuscript restoration, digital art analysis, colonial history, and other humanistic disciplines.
Funded projects are expected to address known AI limitations in multilingual contexts, multimodal humanities datasets, and cultural nuance while producing transferable methodologies, open-source tools, training resources, and reusable datasets that benefit the broader humanities-AI community.
The institute operates as a virtual collaborative network with annual convenings, shared computational resources, and methodological co-development across cohorts.
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Search similar grants →Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Interdisciplinary teams co-led by at least one humanities scholar and at least one AI/computer-science researcher, based at universities, research institutes, libraries, museums, archives, or cultural heritage organizations worldwide. International applications welcome. Proposals must articulate concrete humanities research questions, novel AI techniques to be developed or applied, and an open-science plan for tools, datasets, and findings. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Awards typically range from $100,000 to $800,000 per project. In the inaugural 2025 round, Schmidt Sciences distributed approximately $11 million across 23 research teams. The 2026 Development Awards continue at similar scale, with individual project budgets between $100000 and $800000 USD. Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is March 13, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.
Healthy School Awards Program is sponsored by Blue Cross & Blue Shield Of Mississippi Foundation. Recognizes and rewards public K-12 schools in Mississippi that encourage healthy lifestyle behaviors and implement exemplary school health and wellness initiatives. Awards are given in categories based on school enrollment size, with one school designated as the Healthiest School in Mississippi. Geographic focus: Mississippi Focus areas: Healthy Eating, Physical Activity, Staff Wellness, Tobacco-Free Lifestyles
The Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS) Research Fund is a grant from the Vera and Joseph Dresner Foundation that funds early-career and established investigators conducting research on MDS — a group of blood cancers affecting bone marrow function. The program supports innovative research and clinical trials aimed at improving standards of care for patients. Past awardees include investigators at Johns Hopkins University, Memorial Sloan-Kettering, and H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center. Eligible applicants are U.S.-based 501(c)(3) institutions (universities, hospitals, or research laboratories); principal investigators must hold a doctoral-level degree (MD, PhD, PharmD, or DO). Early-career awards reach up to ,000 per year; established investigator awards up to ,000 over two years. The deadline was March 6, 2026.