< Back to news 


May 2, 2023
€19.6 million Gravity Grant for research on stress
Stress-in-Action: new methods for measuring and reducing stress in everyday life.
The Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU) has received €19.6 million Gravity Grant from the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science (OCW) to develop new methods for measuring and reducing stress in daily life. The aim is to prevent stress-related diseases by better mapping the impact of stress on our daily lives and understanding person-specific patterns of stress responses. Together with researchers from UMC Groningen, the University of Groningen, Erasmus MC and the University of Twente, the VU will work on the 'Stress-in-Action' project over the next 10 years.
Stress, according to research leader and Amsterdam UMC professor Brenda Penninx (psychiatric epidemiology), is the biggest disease burden and a major threat to our well-being and even to a healthy economy. However, our understanding of stress is very limited and there remains a gap between our understanding of what determines stress in our daily lives and how to reduce it. With improved technologies, new monitoring and intervention strategies can be developed to track and reduce stress in daily life and its impact on health.
Vergelijkbaar >
Similar news items

May 22
Private Firms Now Dominate AI Supercomputing: ‘We’re at the mercy of Big Tech’
The global AI arms race is no longer driven by governments but by tech giants. New U.S. research shows that 85% of the world’s most powerful AI supercomputers are now privately owned—up from just 40% in 2019.
read more >

May 21, 2025
From data creator to data reuser: distance shapes trust and reuse
New research from the University of Amsterdam shows that physical, institutional, and social distance influence trust in data—and therefore its reuse.
read more >

May 21, 2025
Max Welling appointed as member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences
University of Amsterdam professor Max Welling has been appointed as a member of the KNAW, in recognition of his pioneering work in machine learning and artificial intelligence.
read more >