GIF 2026 Call
GIF 2026 Call for AI in Science and Society - Overview
The German Israeli Foundation (GIF) invites innovative research proposals that explore the development, application, and societal implications of artificial intelligence (AI). This call seeks projects spanning both Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics, and Medicine (STEM), and Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH).
Two funding tracks are available:
- Collaborative Track: Supports joint proposals by German and Israeli researchers. The duration of the project is up to 3 years, with a maximum total budget of €300,000.
- Solo Track: Supports early-career researchers (up to 8 years post-PhD) submitting one-year projects without a partner from the other country. The maximum budget for this track is €25,000.
More information on the program’s topics, tracks, eligibility, and schedule can be found below.
* Information regarding the application process is available on the “Applicants” webpage.
Topics and Interdisciplinary Collaboration
The current topics in STEM and Social Sciences/Humanities are as follows:
Topic 1: Advancing the Science and Application of Artificial Intelligence (STEM)
Overview
GIF invites submissions that advance the science and application of AI. Proposed research should either advance the field of AI itself or apply AI in a STEM discipline in a way that drives new fundamental or applied scientific insights.
Scope
Areas of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Machine learning, natural language processing, computer vision, data mining, multi-agent systems, knowledge representation, human-in-the-loop AI, search, planning, reasoning, robotics, and perception.
- The application of AI across all STEM fields, including mathematics, computer science, physics, chemistry, life sciences, medicine, and engineering, is a valid topic for the proposed research, provided that the application of AI or AI-based techniques can be shown to bring new advances and novel expectations from the research.
- In addition to foundational contributions within any of these domains, we encourage proposals that combine methods from different AI sub-fields (e.g., machine learning and computer vision; robotics and multi-agent systems; computer vision and natural language processing), as well as proposals that connect AI with related disciplines such as neuroscience and cognitive science, medicine, and other STEM fields.
Topic 2: Artificial Intelligence as an Epistemic Transition (SSH)
Overview
Emerging communication technologies increasingly challenge established forms of knowledge production and their criteria for the validation of evidence. Terms such as “artificial intelligence” and “fake news” have become emblematic of this transformation, which is unfolding at remarkable speed. The consequences are far-reaching: they extend from medical practice, consumer behavior, and political decision-making to the very modes by which scientific knowledge is generated, social relations are constituted, and self-understanding is articulated. Moreover, the presence of artificial intelligence in everyday life, through recommendation systems, automated assistants, personalized advertising, and algorithmic governance, deeply affects how individuals perceive reality, interact with information, and orient themselves in their social environments. Above all, these developments reshape the conditions under which claims of truth are advanced, accepted, or rendered uncertain. In this sense, they mark a profound epistemic transition.
Scope
GIF invites submissions from the SSH that critically investigate the epistemic, social, and cultural transformations associated with AI and related technologies. Projects may address these developments through theoretical, empirical, historical, or methodological approaches.
Interdisciplinary Collaboration
The call strongly encourages collaboration between SSH and STEM partners. Interdisciplinary teams must clearly demonstrate the integration of STEM and SSH perspectives, focusing on AI and its implications.
Timetable
Dates | Details |
September 1, 2026 | Opening GIF-portal for submission of pre-proposals |
October 15, 2026 | Deadline for pre-proposal submissions. The GIF submission portal will close. |
December 15, 2026 | Notifications on pre-proposal decisions Opening GIF portal for full proposal submission |
February 15, 2027 | Deadline for full proposal submission. The GIF submission portal will close. |
July 2027 | Notification of new grants. |
September 2027 | Starting date of new grants. |
Tracks
The GIF 2026 call consists of two tracks: a collaborative track and a solo track.
Collaborative track:
- A team of at least two principal investigators (PIs), one from each country (Israel and Germany).
- Maximum project duration: 3 years.
- Maximum budget: €300,000 for all PIs.
- A CI (Cooperating Investigator) acts as a special advisor to the PI and has no legal ties with GIF. If any payments are required to be transferred to the CI, it should be handled directly by the PI; GIF will not be involved in the process.
- CIs do not have access to the submission portal, as they are not required to upload their CV and publications list. However, at the pre-proposal stage, the PIS can include information about the CI and their contribution to the research in the short project description chapter. At the full proposal stage, it is possible to upload CVs of the CIs under the additional material tab.
- Eligible budget codes: see budget chapter (which appears under “Applicants” section).
- Mandatory mutual visits/meetings: Grantees (or the students actively involved in GIF project) are obligated to meet for several days annually, with one meeting taking place at the GIF Grant partner’s institution during the Grant period.
Solo track for early-career scientists:
- The Principal investigator (PI), should be up to maximum 8 years after obtaining the doctoral degree (PhD, MD, DVM or equivalent) at grant starting date**
- The PI must hold a permanent position, or be on a tenure track, or have a contract covering the full duration of the proposed GIF grant. Post-doctoral candidates are not eligible to apply.
- The PI has no prior scientific collaborations/ties with researchers from the other country (that includes: academic studies, post-doc period, and joint publications, etc).
- Maximum project duration: 1 year.
- Maximum budget: EUR 25,000.
- Eligible budget codes: see budget chapters (which appear under the “Applicants” section).
- Mandatory visit of the PI to the partner country for a minimum of 7 days during the grant period to present their research and establish initial contacts with prospective partners.
**Additional allowance is possible for documented leave of absence after the doctoral degree due to parental leave, national service, clinical training after the first medical degree (up to a maximum of 4 years), long-term illness (longer than 90 days), or caregiving for family members. Periods of leave of absence should be documented in the applicant’s CV, submitted as part of the research proposal.
General criteria of eligibility for GIF applicants
Researchers:
- Applicants must hold at least a PhD diploma and be affiliated to a GIF-eligible institution and hold a permanent position, or be on a tenure track, or have a contract at their institution for the full duration of the GIF Grant they are applying for. Post-doctoral candidates are not eligible to apply.
- The eligibility criteria for the different GIF programs are specified in the respective chapters.
- Each applicant can be a Principal Investigator (PI) in only one proposal at a specific submission cycle.
- Prior to the start of a new GIF grant, all PIs must fulfill all obligations of a former GIF grant.
- The decision on the eligibility of any given researcher rests with GIF.
Institutions:
- Only researchers affiliated to non-profit scientific institution in Israel and Germany, as detailed in the table below, are eligible to submit research proposals to GIF.
- The decision on the eligibility of any given institution rests with GIF. GIF is entitled to request written proof that an institution is a recognized non-profit research entity (private or public).
Israel** | Germany | |
Institutions of Higher Learning | All universities and colleges accredited by the Council for Higher Education as institutions of higher learning | All universities and “Fachhochschulen” who are regular members of the “Hochschulrektorenkonferenz (HRK)”. |
Government Research Institutions and Research Corporations | All government-owned research institutions and research institutions affiliated to one of the Government’s Chief Scientists’ offices. | All government-owned research institutions. |
Public Research Institutions and Research Corporations | All public research institutions which receive a regular subsidy from the government, which constitutes an integral part of their annual budget. This subsidy must appear in the annually published national budget of the State of Israel. | All Max-Planck and all Fraunhofer Institutes. Research institutes fully owned by one or several German federal states (Bundesländer). Consortia involving several of the higher learning / government / public research institutions mentioned above, which can yet be defined as non-profit research organizations. German sites of EMBL (Heidelberg, Hamburg). German site of ESO (Garching). |
Public Hospitals | All government or publicly owned hospitals. The definition of “public” being that public money is being budgeted to the hospital on an annual basis, and that representatives of the public are on its board of directors. | All public hospitals recognized as non-profit organizations. |
- ** Please note: According to the GIF Founding Agreement of 1986 signed by the Ministers of Science of the Federal Republic of Germany and the State of Israel, “Projects sponsored by the Foundation in Israel shall be conducted only within the geographic areas which were under the jurisdiction of the State of Israel prior to June 5, 1967.”
- Industrial enterprises (or other research institutions) registered in Israel or Germany can indirectly participate in GIF grants as subcontractors, with a budget agreed upon and signed by all parties, prior to GIF support.