Call for Proposals

Project Period 2027-2030

The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) established the Infrastructure Priority Programme “New Data Spaces for the Social Sciences” (SPP 2431) as a long-term funding scheme comprising at least two three-year project funding periods beginning in 2024.

The present call invites researchers to submit proposals for the second project funding period (2027–2030). 

Call opens: March 2, 2026

Submission deadline: September 16, 2026

Funding Decision: March, 2027

Funding Phase begins: July, 2027

Information about the New Data Spaces for the Social Sciences Programme (SPP 2431)

Challenge

Panel surveys in the social sciences are facing a number of challenges, including declining response rates, increasing social heterogeneity and individualization, and increasing data collection costs. To equip existing survey infrastructures and panel studies to meet these challenges, they need to be further developed and expanded by opening up new data spaces, including the adoption of new forms of multi-modal data acquisition and data integration and the use of AI.

To expand and enrich our understanding of these opportunities and feasibilities the SPP 2431 goes beyond the current data sources and methods and unlocks emerging opportunities in new data spaces. 

Aims and Scope of the Programme

The SPP 2431 "New Data Spaces for the Social Science" aims to facilitate research that exploits the potential of new forms of data and data generation and that drives a surge in methodological innovations to improve data quality.  It will integrate and consolidate skills, knowledge and expertise from different fields of empirical social research and computer science and provide the means to test new methods and procedures of data generation and data analytics. Its objective is to develop high-quality, best-practice examples of methods for generating, collecting and integrating data, with the aim of enhancing data quality. These methods have the potential to be implemented in existing panel studies, new data collection programmes and data analytic approaches.

To achieve these objectives, the SPP 2431 again invites project proposals in four main interrelated research areas for this second funding phase: 1. Exploration and Integration of Different Data Types, 2. Respondent-Driven Designs, 3. Instrument Validity, 4. Multimodal Data Acquisition.

Research Infrastructure and Innovation Lab (ENTAILab)

Subject to further funding, SPP’s projects are supported and accompanied by a set of three unique research infrastructure services and measures developed and provided by the SPP’s Research Infrastructure and Innovation Lab (ENTAILab). ENTAILab measures offer outstanding opportunities for research on data collection, data processing and data analytics, while disseminating SPP project results to existing panel studies and other research and data provision programmes. As such, ENTAILab also provides the framework to enable the reuse, interoperability, and secure deployment of methods within and across SPP projects.

Applicants are strongly encouraged to consult the ENTAILab Measures early to ensure their proposals align with best practices and requirements related to data quality, data protection and ethics, and the use of existing technological infrastructure.

» ENTAILab 1 - Find out more about Quality Factors in (Panel) Survey Research in the webinar presentation from Dr. Rebecca Scheffauer (DIW Berlin)

Priorities and Considerations for Project Proposals for the second project funding period (2027-2030)

The selection and review of proposals is conducted by an independent DFG review commission. The Speaker and the Programme Committee of New Data Spaces for the Social Sciences (SPP 2431) are not involved in the selection process. However, it is important to the Programme Committee that project proposals have the following characteristics:

 
+ Proposals identify to which research area(s) the project is expected to make a contribution
+ Projects center on a clear research question that drives methodological innovation
+ Projects should have a nexus to (panel) survey research and the further development of panel survey programmes and proposals should address potential applicability to panel survey programmes
 
Projects do not exclusively focus on substantive research without a clear methodological contribution
Projects do not exclusively focus on infrastructure development, survey operations, or data provision
Continued data collection or core elements of existing panel survey cannot be funded

The SPP 2431 is designed as a common and work frame: the organizational structures envisages continuous exchange among the involved researchers. Individually conducted research should be closely paired with collective interaction through various corresponding measures and exchange formats that will be provided.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

This FAQ section provides guidance on key aspects of the call and addresses common enquiries. Applicants are encouraged to review it carefully. If you have any further questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.

The SPP 2431 aims to facilitate research that exploits the potential of new forms of data and data generation and that drives a surge in methodological innovations to improve data quality.  It will integrate and consolidate skills, knowledge and expertise from different fields of empirical social research and computer science and provide the means to test new methods and procedures of data generation and data analytics. Its objective is to develop high-quality, best-practice examples of methods for generating, collecting and integrating data, with the aim of enhancing data quality. These methods have the potential to be implemented in existing panel studies, new data collection programmes and data analytic approaches.

To achieve these objectives, the SPP 2431 again invites project proposals in four main interrelated research areas for this second funding phase: 

          1. Exploration and Integration of Different Data Types

          2. Respondent-Driven Designs

          3. Instrument Validity

          4. Multimodal Data Acquisition.

The selection and review of proposals is conducted by an independent DFG review commission. 

The Speaker and the Programme Committee of New Data Spaces for the Social Sciences (SPP 2431) are not involved in the selection process.

The selection and review of proposals is conducted by an independent DFG review commission. The Speaker and the Programme Committee of New Data Spaces for the Social Sciences (SPP 2431) are not involved in the selection process.

However, it is important to the Programme Committee that project proposals have the following characteristics:

  • Identify to which research area(s) the project is expected to make a contribution
  • Center on a clear research question that drives methodological innovation
  • Have a nexus to (panel) survey research and the further development of panel survey programmes

The SPP 2431 is not intended to fund projects that:

  • Exclusively focus on substantive research without a clear methodological contribution
  • Exclusively focus on infrastructure development, survey operations, or data provision
  • Focus on continued data collection or core elements of existing panel surveys

We invite projects to make use of the following activities and opportunities offered by SPP 2431:

  • ENTAILab-led workshops and webinars for projects
  • Funding for networking-related travel
  • Opportunities for junior researchers (e.g., network, travel scholarships, mentoring, etc.)
  • Annual Meetings with the Scientific Advisory Board
  • Organized conference sessions
  • New Data Spaces | Reports white paper series
  • Science communication and dissemination
  • Public webinar series (expected launch in September 2026)

Projects funded under SPP 2431 are expected to meet a set of collaborative and impact-oriented requirements:

  • No “siloed” research – Projects are expected to interact and network at meetings and through individual project connections
  • Synergy building – Coordinated by the Coordination and Management Project (CONNECT) and the Programme Committee through joint workshops, thematic working groups, and share publications that transcend individual projects
  • Transfer to the scientific community – Goal is to make methods and innovations available to the field of social science surveys

Applicants are encouraged to contact with the ENTAILab Measures early —  — particularly to address broad questions about data quality, data protection, or existing technological infrastructure that are likely to shape your project design or proposal. This is particularly true for projects planning data collection within the infrastructure of an existing panel study and projects planning to collaborate with the Research-Driven Infrastructure for Advanced Survey-Related Data (CIRCLET) if funded. For such foundational questions, we can point you to relevant resources and documentation.

However, the scope of ENTAILab support during the application phase is limited. Intensive, hands-on guidance on specific project questions begins after funding has been granted.

No, it is not strictly necessary to engage with ENTAILab services in order to be considered for funding.

However, we strongly recommend taking advantage of the resources and supports provided by ENTAILab, as these facilitate access to shared infrastructures, advanced tools and expert support, enabling more efficient, high-quality and impactful research.

The SPP 2431 Programme Committee and ENTAILab PIs cannot act as an intermediary between applicants and existing panel studies. Applicants need to engage with each panel study directly through their own application and collaboration processes.

However, if you have general questions about what panel studies are a good fit for your project’s objectives, we may be able to provide orientation and suggestions.

The SPP 2431 is designed to fund a diverse portfolio of projects. The size of any one project has implications for the level of funding that remains available to others. The DFG has therefore indicated an expectation that projects remain focused and appropriately scoped.

We encourage applicants to think carefully about scope early in the design process, particularly reflecting about the number of principal investigators funded on the project, major equipment or infrastructure purchases, and substantial independent data collection efforts.

For further information, please contact Dr. Eckard Kämper (DFG)

No. Server capacity and cloud computing infrastructure cannot be funded under SPP 2431, as these are considered basic equipment. Applicants are expected to make use of existing infrastructure — such as institutional computing centres (Rechenzentren) or other available university resources.

For further information, please contact Dr. Eckard Kämper (DFG)

Yes. The DFG has confirmed that international collaborations — including arrangements with partners in other countries and the distribution of work packages across institutions — are possible within SPP 2431.

Applicants planning such a collaboration should describe clearly in their proposal how the international partnership contributes to the goals of the programme.

For further information, please contact Dr. Eckard Kämper (DFG)

Proposed projects may build on existing panel studies and ENTAILab provides support for this integration process. Each panel study has different characteristics in their target population, sampling and research design, survey frequency, and possibilities for types of add-on projects. For more information about each panel study, see below.

SOEP Innovation Sample (SOEP-IS)

The SOEP Innovation Sample (SOEP-IS) is a mixed-mode household panel survey data collection infrastructure established in 2011. It was designed to enable innovative data collection for the research community and is particularly well suited to establishing new and target-group-specific measurement instruments in long-term surveys, to conducting short-and long-term experiments, and to collecting non-survey data (such as biomarkers). Past SOEP-IS modules include economic behavioral experiments, implicit association tests (IAT), and complex procedures for measuring time use with day reconstruction method (DRM).

 

GESIS Panel

The GESIS Panel consists of two samples: the well-established GESIS Panel.pop Population Sample (Gesis Panel.pop) and the new GESIS Panel.dbd Digital Behavioral Data Sample (GESIS Panel.dbd). The quarterly fielded GESIS Panel.pop is a self-administered probability-based mixed-mode (CAWI and PAPI) panel of the German-speaking adult population permanently residing in Germany with a total sample size of about 5,000 respondents. Established in 2013, it is open to the academic public for primary and secondary research. While about 75% of all respondents participate online, the remaining quarter of our panelists participate in the mail mode (over 1,000 respondents), which we deem important since not everyone in Germany has access to the Internet, the skills to use it, or does want to participate in surveys online. The GESIS Panel.pop pursues a unified mixed-mode design with a mobile-first approach to reduce mode measurement effects. Due to the limitations of the mail mode, we only allow a maximum of four experimental groups per wave. The GESIS Panel.pop allows the submission of cross-sectional as well as longitudinal studies. It is especially suited for drawing inferences about the general population.

NEPS next

NEPS next is the continuation of the long-running starting cohorts of the National Educational Panel Study (NEPS) in a wide-meshed surveying design with a mixed-mode survey (NEPS cohort design). The primary objective of NEPS next is to enhance understanding of the long-term effects of education on individuals’ lives. The study examines changes and continuities since the last survey, with a particular focus on (formal) educational outcomes (e.g., attainment/highest certificates), returns on the labor market (e.g., occupation, job characteristics, income, poverty) or non-monetary returns (e.g., satisfaction, health other noncognitive or socioemotional outcome measures) as well as social, political and cultural participation including background Information (household, family, children, place of residence). In combination with the rich NEPS data collected before wide-meshed surveying started, additional data from NEPS next enable further research into the long-term impacts and effects of education across the lifespan.

 

We encourage project proposals that leverage the expertise of private survey research institutes (e.g., infas, Verian, etc.). Because the DFG offers various pathways for these collaborations—including direct service contracting—we recommend discussing your specific project goals with us and the DFG representatives early in the planning process.

DFG information on collaborations with for-profit companies [in German]

If you are developing a project that would benefit from the expertise of a survey research institute, we can help facilitate connections with interested partners at organizations such as Verian and infas. You are welcome to reach out to us for an individual conversation (connect@lifbi.de).

Downloads

New Data Spaces Presentation — Find here the presentation held by the Programme Committee during the DFG Preparatory workshop, on 8 May 2026 (incl. ENTAILab Measures introduction).

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DFG Workshop - Presentation New Data Spaces SPP 2431

Download

Programme Description — Review the official description for information about the motivation, goals, and structure of the SPP 2431.

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Programme Description New Data Spaces SPP 2431

Download

Contact Information

Questions with regard to scientific content should be directed to the Speaker and Managing Director of the SPP 2431 or to the members of the programme committee:

Prof. Dr. Cordula Artelt
Programme Speaker
Dr. Anika Schenck-Fontaine
Managing Director

Questions on the DFG proposal process can be directed to:

Dr. Eckard Kämper
Programme contact

German Research Foundation (DFG)

Jennifer Seemann
Administrative contact

German Research Foundation (DFG)