U24AG081810
Cooperative Agreement
Overview
Grant Description
Consortium for Longitudinal Behavioral and Social Science Data Integration and Coordination (CLASSIC) - Project Summary/Abstract
NIA has a rich portfolio of “deeply phenotyped” small- to mid-sized longitudinal studies which are an underutilized resource of psychosocial, behavioral, and biomarker data.
The long-term goal is to leverage these single studies through collaboration and coordination in order to address replication, extend findings to new contexts, and identify important factors that moderate healthspan and lifespan.
The overall objectives of this application are to address critical human and technological barriers to collaboration and coordination in these deeply phenotyped studies.
The central hypothesis is that these barriers relate to meta-data sharing (inputs) and multi-study analysis (outputs).
The rationale for this project is that addressing “input” barriers such as PI reluctance and study team burden of meta-data sharing and “output” barriers such as difficulty accessing data and lack of training in multi-study analysis will lower the burden for successful coordination across studies, address broader replication questions, and empower smaller studies to fuel discoveries beyond their initially funded aims.
These objectives will be pursued by four specific aims: development of both technological infrastructure (i.e., central distribution hub with publicly available meta-data catalog and collaboration/coordination resources [Aim 1]) and human infrastructure (i.e., incentivizing study PIs and engaging early career researchers [Aim 2], methodological support through workshops [Aim 3.1] and consulting [Aim 3.2], and financial support [Aim 4] for multi-study analysis).
The proposed research is innovative, in the applicants’ opinion, because it develops tools and provides resources that reduce barriers for both PIs (e.g., dashboard for tracking and attribution, incentivizing meta-data sharing) and early career analysts (e.g., cross-study search and comparison tools, streamlined data requests).
The proposed project is significant because the resulting collaborations and multi-study analyses will systematically test whether findings hold when tested in a diversity of sample characteristics, conditions, and across time.
Ultimately, this will provide more rigorous tests of aging theories and their boundary conditions, which will improve understanding of aging and health.
NIA has a rich portfolio of “deeply phenotyped” small- to mid-sized longitudinal studies which are an underutilized resource of psychosocial, behavioral, and biomarker data.
The long-term goal is to leverage these single studies through collaboration and coordination in order to address replication, extend findings to new contexts, and identify important factors that moderate healthspan and lifespan.
The overall objectives of this application are to address critical human and technological barriers to collaboration and coordination in these deeply phenotyped studies.
The central hypothesis is that these barriers relate to meta-data sharing (inputs) and multi-study analysis (outputs).
The rationale for this project is that addressing “input” barriers such as PI reluctance and study team burden of meta-data sharing and “output” barriers such as difficulty accessing data and lack of training in multi-study analysis will lower the burden for successful coordination across studies, address broader replication questions, and empower smaller studies to fuel discoveries beyond their initially funded aims.
These objectives will be pursued by four specific aims: development of both technological infrastructure (i.e., central distribution hub with publicly available meta-data catalog and collaboration/coordination resources [Aim 1]) and human infrastructure (i.e., incentivizing study PIs and engaging early career researchers [Aim 2], methodological support through workshops [Aim 3.1] and consulting [Aim 3.2], and financial support [Aim 4] for multi-study analysis).
The proposed research is innovative, in the applicants’ opinion, because it develops tools and provides resources that reduce barriers for both PIs (e.g., dashboard for tracking and attribution, incentivizing meta-data sharing) and early career analysts (e.g., cross-study search and comparison tools, streamlined data requests).
The proposed project is significant because the resulting collaborations and multi-study analyses will systematically test whether findings hold when tested in a diversity of sample characteristics, conditions, and across time.
Ultimately, this will provide more rigorous tests of aging theories and their boundary conditions, which will improve understanding of aging and health.
Awardee
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Raleigh,
North Carolina
27695
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 100% from $1,600,000 to $3,196,449.
North Carolina State University was awarded
CLASSIC: Enhancing Longitudinal Data Integration
Cooperative Agreement U24AG081810
worth $3,196,449
from National Institute on Aging in June 2025 with work to be completed primarily in Raleigh North Carolina United States.
The grant
has a duration of 2 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.866 Aging Research.
The Cooperative Agreement was awarded through grant opportunity Resources to Promote Coordination and Collaboration across Deeply Phenotyped Longitudinal Behavioral and Social Studies of Aging (U24 Clinical Trial Not Allowed).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 6/22/26
Period of Performance
6/1/25
Start Date
5/31/27
End Date
Funding Split
$3.2M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$3.2M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to U24AG081810
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
U24AG081810
SAI Number
U24AG081810-4214031147
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Public/State Controlled Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75NN00 NIH National Insitute on Aging
Funding Office
75NN00 NIH National Insitute on Aging
Awardee UEI
U3NVH931QJJ3
Awardee CAGE
1E7H9
Performance District
NC-02
Senators
Thom Tillis
Ted Budd
Ted Budd
Modified: 6/22/26