Funding

 

 

 

 

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FINANCIAL FRAUD RESEARCH CENTER SEED GRANT

The Center provides awards of up to $50,000 to faculty researchers across the Stanford campus. Projects are selected through a competitive process open to all Stanford faculty. The Financial Fraud Research Center seeks to further research that advances the understanding, prevention, and detection of financial fraud inflicted upon individuals. In order to expand the intellectual domain applied to financial fraud, the Center’s seed grant program encourages non-traditional avenues of inquiry.

SEED GRANT, 2012

The Effects of Positive and Negative Arousal on the Susceptibility of Older Adults to False Advertising

Ian H. Gotlib, PhD – Professor, Department of Psychology

Katharina Kircanski, PhD – Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Psychology

Nanna Notthoff, MA – Doctoral Student, Department of Psychology

 

OTHER OPPORTUNITIES

February, May, and August 1  (annual)

The Retirement Research Foundation

Relevance: The financial security of retirees is frequently jeopardized by fraud.

February 5  (annual)

National Institute of Health

Family and Interpersonal Relationships in an Aging Context (R01)

Relevance: It is anecdotally known that considerable fraud is perpetrated by family members against aging adults, but the extent and nature of this fraud remains to be systematically studied.

June 5  (annual)

National Institute of Health

Family and Interpersonal Relationships in an Aging Context (R01)

Relevance: It is anecdotally known that considerable fraud is perpetrated by family members against aging adults, but the extent and nature of this fraud remains to be systematically studied.

No Deadline:

Borchard Foundation: Center on Law & Aging

Academic Research Grant Program

Relevance: Fraud poses particular financial and legal difficulties for older adults.