Metascience

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How can our scientific institutions most effectively encourage progress on society’s most important challenges? The field of metascience aims to develop rigorous, quantitative evidence on this question. If you have ideas of how to do that, we’d like to hear from you.

Science Leads: Paul Niehaus, Caleb Watney, Heidi Williams


The Projects

Browse the participating projects

Sustainable coordination in research labs via graph-enabled idea boards

Our 'graph-enabled idea board' serves as a hub for capturing excess research ideas, allocating microprojects...

Explaining why scientists from different countries have unequal success in publishing their research

New scientific findings are usually made visible through publishing in peer reviewed scientific journals...

Let's increase scientific collaboration by giving scientists the credit they deserve

An over-reliance on authorship to index researchers' achievements has held back scientific collaboration...

FROcasting: A pilot of forecasting in the scientific review of focused research organizations

Scientific grant review consists of experts assessing the approach and impact of a given proposal. The process...

How did the 2013 government shutdown influence scientific research in the Antarctic?

How does a sudden loss of funding affect scientific research? In this project, we use data on a 16-day long...

Gifted Education and the Development of Mathematical Talent

Tracking is common in school districts across the United States. Justifications include the ability to identify...

The role of students' educational choices in the development of mathematical talent

In the UK, students specialise in particular subjects at a relatively early stage in their education, and...

More About This Challenge

The sciency details

Challenge Amount:
$50,000
Submission Deadline:
Mar 10, 2024
Campaign Launch:
Mar 10, 2024

Frequently Asked Questions

How do challenge grants work?

We have $50,000 that we're going to contribute to projects here on Experiment. We will back eligible projects up to $10,000 (and you are welcome to try to raise more using the crowdfunding aspect of Experiment, too). The funds will be distributed on a first-come, first-served basis, so the sooner you fill out a project application the better (use the "start a project" link below).

When will the grant be awarded?

On March 10th at 5PM PT, the prizes will be awarded according to the posted schedule.

Can I still submit a project?

We are no longer accepting projects for this grant, however we will be launching many more challenge grant opportunities. Sign up for our mailing list for up-to-date community news.

Please Note:

If we see suspicious acitivity of researchers or backers potentially cheating during the challenge, the project will be completely disqualified from winning the grant.

Challenge Aims

New scientific discoveries are the basis of long-term economic growth and social progress. While both private philanthropies and public institutions are deeply invested in supporting scientific research, there is a growing sense that we can and must do better. For example, there is evidence it is becoming increasingly difficult for talented young scientists to obtain support for their research, as seen for example in the aging profile of NIH grantees.

One idea now gaining momentum is to build on and amplify the strength of our existing institutions by cultivating a field of metascience -- that is, using the methods of science to improve how we do scientific research. For example, a common question facing many grant-writing institutions is deciding which process to use to select which people or projects to fund. A scientist studying this question could collect information about the outcomes or impacts of various grants and then conduct systematic experimentation—asking, for example, whether peer review protocols lead to more or less socially valuable science relative to, say, an approach in which individual program managers have discretion to themselves select projects.

Two of us (Niehaus and Williams) have been building the Science for Progress Initiative at J-PAL, which is aimed at encouraging more randomized evaluations in this area by J-PAL eligible researchers. However, our sense is that many of the best ideas in this space may be for non-experimental research, or may come from non-J-PAL eligible researchers (including scientists themselves!). The goal of this small grant program is to provide a flexible source of support to a broader set of ideas from a broader set of researchers investigating how we can most effectively fund and support science.

We're open to a broad set of proposals to improve science -- for example, experimental designs, surveys, qualitative interviews with scientists, pilot programs for new mechanisms, scientific talent development strategies, and other research outputs that may be relevant for scientific research funders.

We have $50,000 that we're going to contribute to projects here on Experiment. We will back eligible projects up to $10,000 (and you are welcome to try to raise more using the crowdfunding aspect of Experiment, too). The funds will be distributed on a first-come, first-serve basis, so the sooner you fill out a project application the better (use the "start a project" link below).

Project Eligilibity

Projects must meet Experiment project guidelines and funding discretion rests with the Science Leads (Niehaus, Watney, Williams).

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