Three new grants have been awarded to Centre researchers under the CEPAR Multidisciplinary Collaboration Funding Scheme this year.
The annual grants of up to $10,000 per project aim to provide seed funding for research and activities which enhance multidisciplinary collaboration across and within CEPAR’s four research streams.
The 2022 projects encompass investigations into understanding the length of stay and health trajectory of older Australians in permanent residential care; mental health intervention in non-native speaking aged care recipients; and a cross-cultural investigation into social determinants of ageism among young adults.
Projects funded in past years examined topics such as age discrimination and trends in the Australian workforce; early-life-events and their influence on expectations of ageing in later life; the interplay between life events and shared financial decision-making among older adults and their household decision partners; projections of dementia in populations with special needs.
Applications are assessed on their research quality, multidisciplinarity, research budget, potential for benefit and the quality of the research team and their potential to form a lasting collaboration. A key requirement is that the projects are led by a CEPAR early- to mid-career researcher.
A full listing of projects funded through the Scheme can be found below.
2022 Grants
Project Team |
Project Title |
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Leader: Bei Lu (Economics, UNSW Sydney) Team: Kaarin Anstey (Psychology, UNSW Sydney) Yuchen Xie (Psychology, UNSW Sydney) |
Mental Health Intervention in Non-Native Speaking Aged Care Recipients |
Leader: Gaoyun (Sophie) Yan (Economics, UNSW Sydney) Team: Mengyi Xu (Risk and Actuarial Studies, Purdue University) Michael Sherris (Risk and Actuarial Studies, UNSW Sydney) |
Understanding the Length of Stay and Health Trajectory of Older Australians in Permanent Residential Care
|
Leader: Yvonne Leung (Psychology, UNSW Sydney) Team: Natasha Ginnivan (Psychology, UNSW Sydney) Brooke Brady (Psychology, UNSW Sydney) Kaarin Anstey (Psychology, UNSW Sydney, NeuRA) Po Ling Chen (Neuropsychology, University of Nottingham) Eun Hee Lee (Social Psychology, University of Nottingham) Kimberley Man Min Xi (Psychology, University of Nottingham) |
Social Determinants of Ageism Among Young Adults: A Cross-Cultural Investigation |
2021 Grants
Project Team |
Project Title |
---|---|
Leader: Daniela Andrei (Psychology, Curtin University) Team: Gaoyun (Sophie) Yan (Economics, UNSW Sydney) |
Understanding the Drivers and Consequences of Age Discrimination Trends in the Australian Workforce |
Leader: Natasha Ginnivan (Psychology, UNSW Sydney) Team: Kaarin Anstey (Psychology, UNSW, NeuRA) Myra Hamilton (Sociology, University of Sydney) Saman Khalatbari-Soltani (Epidemiology, Public Health, University of Sydney) Craig Sinclair (Psychology, UNSW Sydney) |
Do Early-Life-Events Influence Expectations of Ageing in Later Life? |
Leader: Saman Khalatbari-Soltani (Epidemiology, Public Health, University of Sydney) Team: Kaarin Anstey (Psychology, NeuRA, UNSW Sydney) Fiona Blyth (Public Health, University of Sydney) Vasi Naganathan (Geriatric Medicine, University of Sydney) Ruth Peters (Psychology, NeuRA) Ying Xu (Psychology, NeuRA) |
Blood Pressure, Retinal Microvascular Abnormalities and Dementia and Epilepsy: Considering Socioeconomic Position |
2020 Grants
Project Team |
Project Title |
---|---|
Leader: Inka Eberhardt (Economics, UNSW Sydney) Team: Brooke Brady (Psychology, UNSW Sydney, NeuRA) Craig Sinclair (Psychology, UNSW Sydney, NeuRA) |
The Interplay between Life Events and Shared Financial Decision-Making among Older Adults and their Household Decision Partners: Longitudinal Evidence from Australia and The Netherlands |
Leader: Bei Lu (Economics, UNSW Sydney) Team: Gigi Petery (Psychology, Curtin University) |
A Progressive Pension Benefit Design |
Leader: Jeromey Temple (Demography, University of Melbourne) Team: Kaarin Anstey (Psychology, UNSW Sydney, NeuRA) Tom Wilson (Demography, University of Melbourne) |
Projections of Dementia in Populations with Special Needs |