Social Psychology
Can you apply?
This grant is for researchers investigating fundamental questions in social psychology and human behavior. Universities, research institutions, and individual researchers can apply, including faculty at all career stages. The program supports theoretically grounded empirical research that advances understanding of how social forces shape attitudes, behavior, and experience. Geographic scope is national; U.S. institutions and researchers are eligible. Research involving non-human animals is accepted only if it directly contributes to understanding human social behavior. Clinical research with primary goals of improving medical practice or treating disease is not eligible.
This grant is for researchers investigating fundamental questions in social psychology and human behavior. Universities, research institutions, and individual researchers can apply, including faculty at all career stages. The program supports theoretically grounded empirical research that advances understanding of how social forces shape attitudes, behavior, and experience. Geographic scope is national; U.S. institutions and researchers are eligible. Research involving non-human animals is accepted only if it directly contributes to understanding human social behavior. Clinical research with primary goals of improving medical practice or treating disease is not eligible.
Program description
The Social Psychology Program at NSF supports theoretically focused empirical investigations that advance fundamental social psychological explanations of human behavior, attitudes, and experience.
Synopsis
The Social Psychology Program invites research and infrastructure proposals that advance knowledge of how human behavior is influenced by macro- and micro-level social forces, including how thought, motivation, emotion, neural, and physiological processes explain ways of thinking about and relating to self and others.
Proposed research should carry strong potential for groundbreaking discoveries about the power of social dynamics to shape peoples’ attitudes, behavior, and experience. Basic research that connects to emerging and ongoing global challenges is especially encouraged.
Proposals that develop new theories or methods are highly encouraged.
Proposals involving non-human animals are considered only if the research offers clear and direct contributions to understanding human social behavior.
Note: Proposals may be returned without review if the primary goal of the research is to improve clinical practice as its primary outcome, or contains disease-related goals, including work on the etiology, diagnosis or treatment of physical or mental illness or disease, medical abnormality, or clinical interventions.
In assessing intellectual merit, the Social Psychology Program places highest priority on research that is theoretically grounded, based on empirical observation and validation, and with designs appropriate to the questions asked (including but not limited to experiments, naturalistic observations, field studies, longitudinal analyses, and computational modeling).
In assessingbroader impacts, the Social Psychology Program places highest priority on proposals that offer strong potential to benefit society, strengthen national security interests, improve the quality of life, build STEM talent, enhance infrastructure for research and education, increase public engagement with science, and include a proactive plan for sharing the results with a wide variety of audiences. PIs are encouraged to review the NSF resources on broader impact.
The Social Psychology Program expects the methods, measures and data that result from NSF support to be openly shared with other researchers and the public. For further guidance proposers should consult Data Management for NSF SBE Directorate Proposals and Awards. The Data Management and Sharing Plan (DMSP) should articulate how the proposed research will engage with best practices of open science. Researchers are expected to engage in open science practices and deviations from that should be well-justified.
The Social Psychology Program accepts regular research proposals, including Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) proposals, proposals for research in undergraduate institutions (RUI), rapid response research proposals (RAPID) and early-concept grants for exploratory research (EAGER). The program also accepts small conference proposals for events (including workshops) being planned one year or more after submission. The Social Psychology Program doesnotaccept proposals for doctoral dissertation improvement awards or mid-career advancement (MCA) awards.
Principal Investigators should selectPD 22-1332 in the program announcement/solicitation block on the proposal cover sheet for submission of regular research projects to the Social Psychology program. Interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary and convergent research approaches are encouraged, and PIs are encouraged to identify possible other programs for co-review. PIs are strongly encouraged to submit the Single Copy Document titled “List of Suggested Reviewers” with their full proposal.
Investigators are encouraged to contact a Social Psychology program director before submitting a proposal to confirm its fit with the scope and priorities of the Social Psychology Program. Such contact is most productive when a one-page (maximum) summary of the planned proposal is sent ahead of a meeting. This summary should include a description of the proposed intellectual merit and broader impacts, as well as an additional page of references cited.
The Social Psychology program is always interested in identifying new reviewers. Potential reviewers should have a Ph.D. in psychology or related field and have a demonstrated area of basic research expertise relevant to social psychology. Individuals interested in reviewing for the program should complete a short survey to indicate their area of expertise and contact information.
Who can apply
Eligible applicants
Details
This grant is for researchers investigating fundamental questions in social psychology and human behavior. Universities, research institutions, and individual researchers can apply, including faculty at all career stages. The program supports theoretically grounded empirical research that advances understanding of how social forces shape attitudes, behavior, and experience. Geographic scope is national; U.S. institutions and researchers are eligible. Research involving non-human animals is accepted only if it directly contributes to understanding human social behavior. Clinical research with primary goals of improving medical practice or treating disease is not eligible.
How to apply
Application links
Required documents
- Project Narrative (proposal)
- Data Management and Sharing Plan (DMSP)
- Budget and Budget Justification
- Biographical Sketches (for all senior personnel)
- Current and Pending Support documentation
Program contact
- 👤 U.S. National Science Foundation
- 📧 grantsgovsupport@nsf.gov
- 📞 703-292-4203
Funding track record
Recent awards under CFDA 47.075 from the last 3 years — real organizations that won funding through this same program.
Top 10 Largest Recent Awards
-
$38,357,018
-
$18,499,999
-
$13,999,656
-
$10,999,998
-
$8,043,354
-
$7,998,747
-
$5,500,000
-
$5,237,549
-
$5,200,000
-
$5,047,151
Top States by Funding
- MI 8 awards $92.7M
- DC 6 awards $20.0M
- AZ 7 awards $19.6M
- NY 8 awards $15.4M
- IL 3 awards $15.1M
Source: USAspending.gov — federal spending transparency. Data covers last 3 years.
Funding history
Annual funding for this program — Federal obligations (CFDA 47.075). How funding has trended year over year.
| 2024 | $292,390,000 | |
| 2025 | $219,410,000 | |
| 2026 est. | $92,200,000 |
FAQ
Who can apply for this grant?
Faculty, researchers, and research institutions nationwide can apply. The program welcomes early-career researchers (CAREER proposals) and proposals from undergraduate institutions (RUI).
What research topics are supported?
Research on social psychology, human behavior, attitudes, and experience shaped by social forces. Theoretically grounded work with strong empirical design is prioritized.
What types of proposals are accepted?
Regular research proposals, CAREER, RUI, RAPID, and EAGER proposals are welcome. Conference/workshop proposals are also accepted if planned one or more years after submission.
What should I avoid?
Do not submit clinical research with primary goals of treating disease or medical abnormality. Dissertation improvement awards and mid-career advancement (MCA) awards are not accepted.
What are data management expectations?
Researchers must share methods, measures, and data openly. Submit a Data Management and Sharing Plan aligned with open science best practices.
💡 Tips for applicants
- Start with a strong theoretical foundation for your research question. NSF prioritizes work that is theoretically grounded and empirically validated.
- Design your study to match your research question. NSF values appropriate methods including experiments, field studies, longitudinal analyses, and computational modeling.
- Develop a clear broader impacts plan. Explain how your work will benefit society, strengthen STEM talent, or increase public engagement with science.
- Plan for open science from the start. Detail how you will share methods, measures, and data with researchers and the public.
- Consider interdisciplinary collaboration. NSF encourages convergent approaches and may co-review with other programs if you identify relevant collaborators.
⚠️ Common mistakes
Weak or unclear theoretical grounding for the research question. Failing to articulate a compelling broader impacts plan that connects to societal benefit or STEM development. Submitting clinical research or disease-focused work that violates the program's scope limitations.
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