Some projects are still receiving applications through Jan 18th! View projects

Research program for AI risks

Connecting rising talent
with expertise to tackle risks from AI

We're a part-time, remote research fellowship that enables aspiring AI safety and policy researchers to work on impactful research projects with professionals in the field.

Applications close January 14

Meet our 120+ mentors for Spring 2026

Janika  Schmitt
Aaron Scher
Aidan O'Gara
Charbel-Raphael Segerie
Jakub Krys
Matthew Smith
Mia Hopman
Ihor Kendiukhov
Jaehyuk Lim
Arvo Munoz Moran
Gabriele Sarti
Gabriel Kulp
Georg Lange
Jérémy Andréoletti
Yoav Tzfati
Anemone Franz
Joël N. Christoph
Juan Vazquez
Paul Rapoport
Aparupa Sengupta
Luis Cosio
Rohan Gupta
Zhamilia  Klycheva
Pascal Berrang
Gary Abel
Justin Olive
Justin Shenk
Nelson Gardner-Challis
Dmitry Manning-Coe
James Montavon
Jeff Sebo
Larissa Schiavo
Toni Sims
WEN XING
Luca Arnaboldi
Yogev Bar On
Alex Mark
Rohan Subramani
Daniel Tan
Rauno Arike
Xavier Poncini
Sriram Balasubramanian
Iván Arcuschin Moreno
Joar Skalse
Charles Martinet
Charles  Martinet
Guillem Bas Graells
Michał Kubiak
David Williams-King
Linh Le
Ying-Chiang  Lee
Thilo Hagendorff
Aaron Mueller
Bouke Klein Teeselink
Tony Wang
Evan Harris
Chad DeChant
Samuel Brown
Isaak Mengesha
Christos Ziakas
Elliott Thornley
Tim Hua
Robert Krzyzanowski
Mario Giulianelli
Raghu Arghal
Niels Warncke
Dan Greene
Allen Lu
Qiyao Wei
Damiano Fornasiere
Mirko Bronzi
Uzay Macar
Roy Rinberg
Andy Liu
Santiago Aranguri
Abhay Sheshadri
Arjun  Khandelwal
Robi Rahman
Katherine Stansifer
Claudio Mayrink Verdun
Dylan Hadfield-Menell
Andy Arditi
Christopher Ackerman
Fred Heiding
Maxime Riche
Rick Goldstein
Diogo Cruz
Ivaxi Sheth
Jassi Pannu
Rishub Jain
Vamshi Krishna Bonagiri
Vyas Raina
Yuxiao Li
John (Jack) Morris
Alex Woodruff
Andrew Draganov
Ariana Azarbal
Arun Jose
Dawn Song
Elsa Donnat
Emilio Barkett
Jonathn Chang
Kei Nishimura-Gasparian
Lionel Levine
Lydia Nottingham
Matteo  Pistillo
Peter Salib
Shivam Raval
Simon Goldstein
Tianyi Alex Qiu
Victor Gillioz
Yiyou Sun
Zhonghao He
Diana Mocanu
Visa Kurki
Elizaveta Tennant
Alexander Meinke
Emil Ryd
Katja Grace
Keshav Shenoy
Aris Richardson
David Demitri Africa
Fin Moorhouse

What is SPAR?

A part-time, remote research program pairing aspiring researchers with professionals addressing risks from AI. Mentees gain research experience and guidance; mentors get capable collaborators.

Commit 5–40 hours/week, depending on your availability. SPAR is designed to fit well alongside other commitments.

3 months of structured research, culminating in Demo Day — posters, talks, and a career fair with organizations like METR, Redwood Research, GovAI and MATS.

We accept mentees with relevant technical or policy background at any level, from undergraduate students to mid-career professionals.

Selected Research

SPAR research has been accepted at ICML and NeurIPS, covered by TIME, and led to full-time job offers for mentees.

Check out some of our work:

What research does SPAR support?

SPAR supports a broad range of research that we think is helpful for helping society mitigate the risks posed by advanced AI, including but not limited to:

AI Safety

Ensuring powerful AI systems follow human intentions

AI Policy

Governing the development of transformative AI

AI Security

Hardware-enabled governance and preventing the theft of model weights

Interpretability

Reverse-engineering neural networks and their internal representations

Biosecurity

Preventing or preparing for AI-enabled bioattacks

Societal impacts

Understanding the effect of transformative AI on society and the economy

Why apply?

Research experience

Build the skills to break into technical AI safety, AI policy or biosecurity research and learn whether this path is right for you. SPAR and your mentor provide structured support to help you start your journey.

Expert mentorship

Get advice and support from experienced researchers to support your development of key scientific skills.

Career opportunities

Most projects in SPAR result in papers. Our demo day gives you the opportunity to present your research in front of researchers from organizations like METR, Redwood Research, GovAI and MATS.

Community

Join a research team of peers with shared interests who support each other's growth. Virtual coffee chats and in-person meetups provide additional opportunities to connect.

Impact

Conduct real, cutting-edge research to help the world answer the most pressing questions of our time. Most projects lead to published papers or preprints with mentee co-authors.

Prizes!

Last year we awarded $7,000 total at our Demo Day, which rewards the best posters and talks for projects in the program.

What's it like to be a SPAR mentee?

From application to publication, here's what you can expect.

STEP 01

Browse Projects

Explore available projects and apply to work on ones you're excited about.

STEP 02

Conduct Research

Spend 5-40 hours/week on real catastrophic risk research with your team. Receive structured support and regular feedback.

STEP 03

Present at Demo Day

Present your research at our virtual mini-conference attended by leading AI safety organizations. The best posters and lightning talks will be eligible for prizes!

STEP 04

Continue & Collaborate

Many mentorship pairs continue working together after the program ends, leading to publications and career opportunities.

Mentee testimonials

I think SPAR is the best place for anyone to get involved and just get started with research.

Kushal, Information Safety

[My mentor] was extremely willing to share his connections and was involved in the trenches with us from the beginning. He provided some thought-provoking insights and guidance and opened himself up for 1:1s, even as he started a new key role... It was a pleasure to work with [my mentor] and I hope it won't be the last time.

Noah, Overview of Systemic Economic Risks from TAI Systems

Thank you for such a fantastic opportunity! During the program I was offered an AI Safety role at Google and recently started right as SPAR ended. I felt like the program gave me great experience and helped strengthen my passion which no doubt helped with getting the job.

Greta, Near Zero-knowledge Detection of Undesired Behavior

It's exactly the "foot in the door" one needs when transitioning into research positions.

Harry, Using RL to train shutdownable agents

Am I eligible?

The program is open to undergraduate, graduate/PhD students, and professionals of different experience levels. Mentors often look for a technical background (e.g., ML, CS, cybersecurity, math, biology, physics, etc.) or knowledge relevant to policy and governance (e.g., law, international relations, public policy, political science, economics, etc.).

Some projects may require additional background knowledge, like knowledge of specific research areas, techniques, or tools (e.g. ML frameworks).

We don't require previous research experience, and many mentees have none.

Even if you do not entirely meet these criteria, we encourage you to apply! Many past mentees have been accepted even though they didn't completely match a project's criteria.

FAQs

The SPAR program follows this timeline:

  • November 5 - December 5: Mentor application period
  • December 15: Mentor decisions released
  • December 17 - January 14: Mentee application period
  • February 2 - February 6: Mentee application decisions released
  • February 16 - May 16: Research period
  • After May 16: Optional continuation