Research Grants

 

 

The Griffin Applied Economics Incubator serves as a platform to develop innovative approaches, advance and disseminate new research, and accelerate talent in a specified field each academic year. Towards that end, the Incubator is pleased to announce the recipients of research grants for projects on The Data Revolution below!

Research grants are awarded through a competitive process to support these new research and data development projects from UChicago faculty.

 

Research Grants 2021-2022 – “The Data Revolution”

The Griffin Applied Economics Incubator is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2021-22 Research Grants for “The Data Revolution.” Thank you to all applicants. Award recipients include:

  • Guillaume A. Pouliot (Co-Investigator: Samuel Higbee, Ph.D. Student, Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics)
  • Raul Castro Fernandez 
  • Eyal Frank (Co-Investigators: Anouch Missirian, Toulouse School of Economics; Sushant Banjara, Ph.D. Student in the Harris School of Public Policy)
  • Peter Ganong (Co-Investigators: Jonathan Gruber, MIT; Pascal Noel, Booth School of Business)
  • Jeffrey Grogger (Tom Kirchmaier, Centre for Economic Performance, London School of Economics)

Research Grants 2021-2022 Titles – “The Data Revolution”

Principal Investigators Co-Investigator(s) Title
Guillaume A. Pouliot Samuel Higbee (Ph.D. Student in the Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics) “Optimal Transport as a Regression Tool”
Raul Castro Fernandez   “Discovering Alternative Data for Economic Research”
Eyal Frank Anouch Missirian (Toulouse School of Economics), Sushant Banjara (Ph.D. Student, Harris School of Public Policy) “Land-Use Restrictions and Perverse Incentives: Using Machine Learning to Evaluate the Endangered Species Act from High-Frequency Satellite Data”
Peter Ganong Jonathan Gruber (MIT), Pascal Noel (Chicago Booth School of Business) “Experimental Estimates of Willingness to Pay for Unemployment Insurance”
Jeffrey Grogger Tom Kirchmaier (Centre for Economic Performance, London School of Economics) “Arrest, Risk Assessment, and Domestic-Abuse Recidivism”

Call for Proposals

The Causality Challenge

The Griffin Applied Economics Incubator invites submissions for The Causality Challenge beginning December 1, 2021.  The Causality Challenge intends to discover and develop talent in applying econometrics and machine learning for prediction and causal inference.

For the prediction aspect of the Challenge, participants will be asked to predict specified variable(s) from a training set, and results will be assessed based on prediction performance on a test set. For the causality aspect, participants will be asked to estimate the causal effect of one specified variable on another and explain/motivate the approach taken. To assess the results for the causal inference part, the jury will consider the credibility of the research approach as well as the plausibility of the final estimate.

Awards/compensation:

The top three winners will receive funding toward a Research Assistant position with a faculty member working in a related field at the University of Chicago. Positions will be full-time with a competitive rate of $18/hr., 30 hours per week for 10 weeks plus a $2500 housing stipend.


Submission Guidelines and Documents

Causality Challenge Instructions Causality Challenge Datasets

Submission Link

Submit to The Causality Challenge

Submission Deadline

Sunday, January 9, 2022 at 11:59 p.m. CST.

 

Questions about the Kenneth C. Griffin Applied Incubator Innovation Fund Grants can be sent to Diana Smith at dianas@uchicago.edu or 773-702-8176.