SleepImage Names 2025 ‘Making Sleep Health a Priority in Children’ Grants
SleepImage has awarded two research grants to further the scientific understanding of children’s sleep.
SleepImage has awarded two research grants to further the scientific understanding of children’s sleep.
SleepImage has awarded grants to researchers focused on advancing the understanding of sleep health inequities across diverse global populations.
A $1.1 million grant will be used to study how brain-synched sounds during sleep might improve memory in older adults with mild cognitive impairment.
Read MoreThe research will investigate an approach to identify brain activity associated with dementia during sleep.
Read MoreWest Virginia University researchers received funding to refine wearable devices that could make sleep apnea detection more accessible and affordable for patients at home.
Read MoreA $435,689 grant aims to advance the understanding and treatment of sleep disturbances in adolescents recovering from traumatic brain injury.
Read MoreFunded by an NIH grant, the research aims to establish the scientific foundations for the impact of napping on the cognitive and memory development of infants and preschoolers.
Read MoreSleepCogni will collaborate with Sheffield Children’s NHS Foundation Trust to advance its handheld insomnia devices for use in young patients.
Read MoreUnlike existing trackers that are not tailored for children, this wearable device is small and unobtrusive and utilizes open-source software to allow researchers direct access to raw data.
Read MoreThe project, supported by a $3 million NIH grant, also aims to identify patients who would benefit most from using CPAP, as well as patients who should avoid CPAP.
Read MoreThe pilot study will lay the groundwork for a larger-scale study of approximately 2,000 subjects over a two-year period.
Read MoreMount Sinai experts say preliminary data from three cohorts of nearly 11,000 participants suggests the machine-learning model could predict the probability of sleepiness due to apnea with an accuracy of about 87%.
Read MoreThe grant will provide advanced research training to post-graduate trainees from groups that are underrepresented in medicine and have research interests in heart, lung, blood, and sleep disorders.
Read MoreThe funding will be used to explore which dimensions of healthy sleep contribute to resistance and resilience of Alzheimer’s disease.
Read MoreFocusing on both urban or rural communities in Tennessee, Georgia, and Colorado, the project aims to reach families who have limited access to health care.
Read MoreThe research will be conducted by Tetyana Kendzerska, MD, PhD, the 2023 recipient of the CHEST Foundation and the AASM Foundation research grant in sleep medicine.
Read MoreThe Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute is inviting proposals for new studies and projects through 10 funding opportunities, with up to $100 million in opportunities focused on sleep health.
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