About Autism Science Foundation
Autism Science Foundation concentrates on funding autism research training and early-stage scientific work, with recent grants reaching postdoctoral fellows, predoctoral trainees, undergraduates, and projects on profound autism. The largest recent award in the data is $98,000 to The Regents of the University of California Davis for a Next Gen Sibs grant and post-undergrad fellowship grant, showing that the foundation supports both research and the next generation of researchers in the same portfolio. Other sizable awards include $60,000 to University of California Los Angeles for a post-undergrad grant and $50,000 to University of California San Diego for a post-doc grant, alongside multiple $35,000 awards for profound autism pilot grants and training grants at major universities. The grantmaking pattern also includes awards tied to sibling-focused work, travel support, and accelerator funding for active research. Across the recent grants listed, the foundation backs universities, medical schools, and research institutions that are conducting autism research or building research capacity. Its programs include fellowships, pilot grants, accelerator awards, and conference travel awards, all aligned with autism science and workforce development.
What Autism Science Foundation Funds
Several cause areas appear across Autism Science Foundation’s recent grantmaking. In profound autism, they awarded $35,000 to Washington University for a profound pilot grant and another $35,000 to University of California San Francisco for a profound pilot grant. For training and workforce development, Rutgers University received $50,000 for a pre-doc grant, while Arizona State University received $23,333 for a pre-doctorate grant. Sibling-focused work also appears in the portfolio: The Regents of the University of California Davis received $98,000 for a Next Gen Sibs grant and post-undergrad fellowship grant, and Els for Autism Foundation received $10,000 for Sam’s Sibs Stick Together Project. The foundation also supports research acceleration, including $7,500 to Boston University for an accelerator grant.
How Autism Science Foundation Gives
Typical awards cluster in the middle range, with a p25 of $12,500, a median of $17,500, and a p75 of $37,000. The recent grant list shows repeated funding to the same institutions across years, including University of California Los Angeles, Rutgers University, Yale University, and University of California Davis, which points to ongoing relationships rather than isolated one-off gifts. Autism Science Foundation does not fund individuals; its support goes to institutions and organizations. The active programs list shows that several grant programs accept unsolicited applications, including fellowships, pilot grants, postdoctoral support, and accelerator awards.