Seed Grant Funding

Note: This funding opportunity for the 2024-2025 cycle is now closed. Please check back for future opportunities or become a member for email updates.
The Whole Health Consortium (WHC) grants awards that will enable researchers to form collaborative and interdisciplinary teams. The aim is to prime these teams for high-impact, community-engaged research, setting the stage for them to develop research proposals robust enough to compete for larger, more substantial future grants such as NIH Program Projects (P Series), Center Grants (U and P Series), NSF Growing Convergence Research (GCR) Grants, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) Grants, among others focused on tackling holistic health and well-being in transformative ways.
2023-2024 Priority Research Areas
2024-2025 Priority Research Areas
FUNDED SEED GRANT PROPOSALS | The Whole Health Consortium
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General Item2023 | Track 1 | Stressed Out Moms - Targeting the Body to Treat the Brain and Prevent Intergenerational Transmission of Mental Health Issues
This project will address the need for alternative, non-pharmacological approaches to depression, particularly in mothers and children.
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General Item2023 | Track 1 | Designing AI as a Mental Health Resource for Autistic Adults: Enhancing Therapeutic Approaches with Multimodal Interactions
The goal of this project is to collaboratively design an interactive artificial intelligence (AI) system using large language models to support the mental health needs of autistic adults, with a specific focus on repetitive negative self-talk.
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General Item2023 | Track 2 | Community Advisory Groups to Inform Youth Mental Health Needs in Southwest Virginia
The goal of this project is to build collaborative partnerships between Virginia Tech’s Child Study Center, schools, and families in Southwest Virginia to identify current youth mental health needs and resources, and to leverage community perspectives in ongoing and future mental health related research.
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General Item2023 | Track 2 | The Development of a Brief Self-Compassion Intervention to Improve Mental Health Among Caregivers Experiencing Food Insecurity
This project aims to create an intervention that is tailored and accessible to caregivers of young children experiencing food insecurity, such as nutrition education programs, food banks, and pantries.