Huo Junior Faculty Research Grants
Funding Amount
Up to US $780,000
Deadline
Rolling / Open
Grant Type
foundation
Overview
Huo Junior Faculty Research Grants
Status: ACTIVE
Funder: Huo Family Foundation
Amount: Up to US $780,000
Last Updated: February 04, 2026
Summary
The Huo Junior Faculty Research Grants, provided by the Huo Family Foundation, aim to support early career researchers investigating the impact of digital technology on brain development, social behavior, and mental health in youth aged 7-24. With a grant of up to £200,000 per year for three years, applicants are encouraged to explore causal pathways and engage young people in design and execution. The foundation seeks to advance multi-disciplinary research to foster the next generation of scientists in this critical area.Overview
The Huo Family Foundation Since its inception in 2009, The Huo Family Foundation has pledged over $75 million to support projects in the UK, US and China. The Foundation’s mission is to support education, communities and the pursuit of knowledge. Its current areas of focus are education, the arts, and science. Through its donations, the Foundation hopes to improve the prospects of individuals, and to support the work of organisations seeking to ensure a safe and successful future for all society. Call for Proposals: Effects of the Usage of Digital Technology on Brain Development, Social Behaviours and Mental Health in Children and Young People A long-standing interest of HFF has been the effect and impact of usage of digital technology on young people. The rapid rise and use of this technology has permeated much of society and transformed the way many humans interact. There has been a broad array of research efforts that mostly have involved relatively crude measures of the amount of usage of digital technology (e.g. total screen time) and the observed effects and impact on health. Despite these efforts, the full implications – both positive and negative – on human physiology, psychology, behaviour, well-being and mental health remain unclear. We believe there is an opportunity to help advance the research and the field of knowledge in this area, both by strengthening existing as well as creating new methods and approaches to better model and unpick the complexities of this topic. We welcome applications for Huo early-career fellowships, junior faculty research grants and special projects. We are keen to support multi-disciplinary work. We want to help train the next generation of exceptional scientists in this rapidly evolving field. Applications should attempt to understand mechanisms, causal pathways and directions. Huo Junior Faculty Research Grants The Huo Family Foundation invites applications for junior faculty research grants to support early career researchers to develop further their own research vision and help establish a research group. These grants are to support new lecturers/assistant professors at the start of their careers to foster their independence and gain experience of managing and leading research projects and teams. Proposals should be tackling key questions within the broad topic of the effects of usage of and exposure to digital technologies on brain development and function (including physiological responses), social behaviour and interactions, and mental health of children and young people. Remit, Definitions and Expectations We are interested in research on the effects of usage of and exposure to digital technologies on brain development and function (including physiological responses), social behaviour and interactions, and mental health of children and young people.Study designs should attempt to understand causal pathways and directions.Digital technology typically means digital devices, systems, tools and resources that generate, process and store data. For this call, digital technology refers to devices, systems, tools and services used by children and young people. For example, this would include smart phones, tablets, computers/laptops, gaming consoles, online games, the internet, social media, other digital environments, instant messaging, video-sharing, etc.The research should focus on children and/or young people within the age range of 7-24 years old.We encourage the use of existing population (epidemiological) cohorts and data sets. We also encourage precision and deep-dive studies within these existing cohorts and data sets.We encourage randomised approaches to studying the effects of the use of digital technologies on the brain, mind, physiological responses, and behaviour of children and young people. This may include the use of Randomised Controlled Trials (RCT) methodology.Given the scarcity of longitudinal evidence, we encourage work that involves follow-up and repeated observations.We will consider mechanistic studies of smaller, well-defined participant groups.Public and Community Involvement, Engagement and Participation (PCIEP): proposals are expected to involve and engage young people (children, adolescents and/or young adults) in the study design and during the delivery of the proposal.We are keen to support multi-disciplinary work to help advance the research and the field of knowledge. Applications are welcome from researchers from all relevant fields, which may include but is not limited to neuroscience, psychology, psychiatry, epidemiology, public health, computer science, social science, economics. We welcome applicants with training in one or more of these or related disciplines.We want to support the training of the next generation of exceptional scientists in this rapidly evolving field.Studies should produce new knowledge that contributes to the understanding of the occurrence, distribution, causes, mechanisms and impacts (e.g. social, behavioural, physiological, health and well-being, economic) of the effects of the usage of digital technology on children, adolescents and young adults. Examples of Research We Want to Support We have identified various scientific areas and approaches that are of particular interest to the Foundation: Pathways and mechanisms of the effects of the usage of or exposure to digital technology on brain development and function, social interactions and behaviour, and on mental health.The effects of usage of or exposure to digital technology on key processes such as arousal, attention, learning, reward system, resilience, sleep.How different developmental time windows (childhood, adolescence, early adulthood) might involve different neurodevelopment processes that can give rise to different susceptibilities.Developing and using new tools for more accurately measuring exposure (i.e. usage information) for different forms of digital tech and environments to reduce bias and improve precision to look at causal pathways and relationships.Sufficiently powered studies, and those that take appropriate account of potential confounding effects.Work that involves data-sharing partnerships with digital tech companies to have access to better data.Combining disciplines and approaches.Using the latest methods, such as machine learning/AI to help analyse data to make better inferences/predictions that will generalise. Funding Grants are for up to a three-year term. The grant amount is up to £200,000 / US$260,000 per year.Eligibility
You can learn more about this opportunity by visiting the funder's website. The applicant(s) must hold a PhD or equivalent degree in a relevant field, which may include but is not limited to neuroscience, psychology, psychiatry, epidemiology, public health, computer science, social science, economics.The applicant(s) should be new lecturers/assistant professors at colleges, universities and research institutes in the UK or the US. Your appointment should be permanent, open-ended, or on a long-term rolling basis, or a tenure-track position; if your institution has both academic and research fellow tracks, they are considered equivalent.At the time of award, applicant must be within two years of taking up their permanent tenure-track position. Allowances will be made for part-time work, career breaks (for example, parental leave or long-term sickness) and other significant amounts of time spent outside research (for example, clinical training).The applicant(s) must be based at colleges, universities and research institutes in the UK or the US.The lead institution is the college, university or research institute where the lead applicant is located.The organisation should have charitable status or a nonprofit status such as 501(c)(3).On overhead/indirect costs, up to 12.5% of the total grant is permitted for US-based work, while UK-based work should be based on direct costs only, given HFF funding would be eligible for UK government charity research (QR) support. The grant can be used to conduct research outside of the US and UK (e.g. a study involving a well-defined group or a cohort of adolescents in another country). However, there would need to be a clear rationale why this is necessary (e.g. particular or unique characteristics of the cohort or specific exposures) and the work would need to be delivered by applicants and collaborators as defined above. Please note a senior colleague with relevant authority at your host institution will have to sign off your application before submission.Ineligibility
Work that is out scope:We will not support the establishment of new population (epidemiological) cohorts.We will not consider applications that look at the development and/or deployment of digital technology (to include, but not limited to, web-based programmes, mobile applications, applications of generative AI, chatbots, extended reality, wearable devices or video games) to deliver treatment for mental health problems.We will not consider applications that look at the development and/or deployment of digital technology to deliver educational learning.Proposals including randomised controlled trials or similar methodologies should not include the testing of drugs, medical treatments, medical/healthcare/well-being devices or diagnostic procedures.We will not consider applications on clinical service provision/reorganisation.Studies should not include work involving animals.We will not support systematic reviews.Grant funds are not to be used to support the lead applicant’s salary or that of the co-applicants. It is expected that their employing college, university or research institute will cover the salary of the applicant(s) for the duration of the grant.Focus Areas & Funding Uses
Fields of Work
science-researchmental-health
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