Research Grant Program

Call for 2024 Student Grant Proposals

Aligning with our mission of improving lives affected by chronic disorganization, ICD® established our research grants program in 2013.

In the years the program is offered, the winning projects are determined by a thorough, content-oriented review by our Research Advisory Council and financial/business approval by the ICD Board of Directors. 

To stimulate research related to chronic disorganization, ICD invites graduate students (masters or doctoral level) to submit research proposals in topic areas related to chronic disorganization.

Up to two grants of $1000 each will be awarded. Grantees must commit to participate in a panel presentation on their research during the 2024 Conference to be held September 19-21, 2024, in Bloomington, MN located in the Minneapolis, MN area.  The Institute for Challenging Disorganization (ICD) is a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization with a mission to provide education, research and strategies to benefit people challenged by chronic disorganization

Chronic Disorganization (CD):

  • Persists over a long period of time,
  • Frequently undermines quality of life, and
  • Recurs despite repeated self-help attempts.

Proposal topics include, but are not limited to, the following as they relate to chronic disorganization:

  • Prevention and/or services to individuals affected by CD
  • Cognitive behavioral or other therapies and collaboration with professional organizers
  • Hoarding: collaborative response by community agencies to hoarding (pets or possessions); hoarding task forces; hoarding disorder, compulsive buying, and possession attachment
  • Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, Anxiety, Depression
  • Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder  
  • Brain injuries
  • Learning styles, decision-making styles, executive function
  • Physical disabilities
  • Aging, including older adult transitions
  • Major life transitions/disruptions to self-identity
  • Grief and loss, including loss of possessions resulting from natural disasters
  • Clutter and quality of life
  • Neurodiversity

Proposals should be submitted to [email protected].

The deadline for proposals is 5:00 pm Eastern on Tuesday, February 13, 2024. Funding decisions will be announced in April.

Download the 2024 ICD Student Research Grant Request for Proposal

 

 

Past Winning Projects

Devki Patel, M.S. program, Psychology, DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois, USA

For the research project:

Clutter and Varied Environments: How Do Different Settings Impact Decision Making to Declutter or Not?

Proposal Abstract

Three interrelated yet separate studies assessing both physical clutter in one’s home as well as virtual clutter are proposed. These projects explore the relationship between environments (real and virtual) and self-reported clutter. No empirical studies explored clutter during the COVID-19 pandemic in work and home digital settings, and in different home structures. In one study, we examine the pandemic as an environmental factor and how it impacted individuals' decision to declutter. Given individuals' increased time spent at home during the COVID-19 shelter in place ordinances, we explored the decision-making processes that influence one’s choice to declutter or not. In another study, we explore work and home environments and digital clutter experiences. Increased technology use has left clutter professionals wanting to explore digital clutter experiences and how different environments influenced digital clutter. Lastly, we explore different home structure environments (e.g., single-family home, apartment) and how possessing additional home structures (e.g., garage, attic) may impact an individual’s amount of clutter. It is important to assess clutter in various environments so individuals, researchers, and ICD coaches may understand how different environmental factors influence clutter or decluttering behaviors and interventions can be tailored to specific environments.

 


 

Awarded to:

Helena Swanson, Community Psychology Ph.D. program, Psychology, DePaul University, Chicago Illinois, USA

For the research project:

Who Has More Clutter? Exploring Adult Subgroups and Their Clutter

Research Project Titles:

1. Seniors with Stuff: Older Adults and Clutter

2. When There’s Just Too Much Stuff: Office Clutter by Remote Employees

3. Student Shelters: Does Where Students Live (Home, Apartment, Dorm) Impact Life with Clutter?

Proposal Abstract

Collectively, these three proposed studies will explore subgroups of the US population (e.g., older adults, remote workers, and college students) and their clutter and its impact on the quality of life. Exploring the amount of clutter and clutter impact for these subgroups is important as our society changes with individuals aging, transitions to increased remote working conditions, and for college students assessing the impact their overabundance of material goods may have on their life. As our world ages there is an intense need for more research on older adults and for practitioners to better understand how to serve older adults (National Institute on Aging et al., n.d.). As for remote working, projections show that 16% of employees will remain working from home long after the pandemic (Senz, 2020); it is important for organizations (such as ICD) to understand how remote workers’ environment may impact work. Lastly, previous research found that different living situations impact college students in a variety of ways (Brevard & Ricketts, 1996), but clutter’s impacts based on student living space was not explored. Taken together, these projects contribute understanding to individuals, communities, and organizations, like ICD’s declutter coaches, of how clutter may be impacting these subgroups.

 


 

Awarded to:

David Charles, M.S., Ph.D. program, Psychology, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, North Chicago, Illinois, USA

For the research Project:

An Investigation of Category Learning and Hoarding Problems

Proposal Abstract

Hoarding Disorder (HD) is a serious psychiatric condition that is characterized by excessive acquisition, difficulty discarding, and clutter. While HD has been included as a separate diagnosis in the DSM-V, more research is needed to fully understand how HD is distinct from other disorders such as OCD and to improve treatments available for HD. The current cognitive-behavioral theoretical model of HD suggests that the disorder is in part caused by information processing deficits, which impacts various executive functions such as organization. Initial studies have attempted to measure organization skills by utilizing sorting tasks and explicit category learning tasks (e.g., the Wisconsin Card Sorting Task). To date, studies utilizing these tasks have been inconclusive and explicit category learning deficits are commonly found in individuals with OCD. Preliminary neurobiological studies of hoarding behaviors suggest that these individuals may suffer from implicit category learning deficits. The current proposed study aims to compare implicit category learning performances among individuals with HD, OCD, and other anxiety disorders to help further elucidate the distinctions between these disorders. Doing so may also better inform treatments and strategies to help address the chronic disorganization that helps maintain dysfunction in individuals who hoard or similar difficulties.

 


 

Awarded to:

Rachael Suffrin, Clinical/Community Psychology Ph.D. Student, and Juline Girts, Psychology Masters Student of DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois, USA

For the research project:

Let’s be Intentional about Our Stuff: Exploring Clutter and Quality of Life

Proposal Abstract

The purpose of this study is to explore the relationships between clutter and quality of life. In this study, we are exploring the quality of life in terms of a stronger psychological sense of home and sense of community. As many intentional living communities proactively work towards building a sense of community and developing more than “just a home” for residents (with some also subscribing to a living simply philosophy), examining how beliefs, expectancies and attitudes about “home” may differ between intentional living communities, and traditional living situations (e.g., with roommates, living alone, in a dorm) will help to better understand the relationship between sense of community, home, clutter, and disorganization, as well as place and object attachment. Although many studies rely almost exclusively on self-report methods, this study exemplifies ingenuity and innovation by utilizing a combination of not only self-report, but also structured in-home observations with individuals across multiple samples (i.e., college student, post-undergraduate fellows, and adults in the community) to gain a clearer sense of how these variables interconnect. Findings may help to better understand how to improve the quality of life for individuals living in chronic disorganization and clutter.

 


 

Awarded to:

Kim Stetson Bolstad, B.A., and Taylor Wolf, B.S. Masters Program, Professional Mental Health Counseling, Lewis & Clark Graduate School of Education and Counseling, Portland, Oregon, USA

For the research project:

Clutter Support Group for Individuals with Chronic Disorganization

Proposal Abstract

This qualitative study will identify benefits that self-identified “chronically disorganized” individuals gain from attending a clutter support group.  The support group, designed by the authors, is a psychoeducation focused group helping participants learn and gain insight into their own individual hoarding situations, and teaches participants decluttering and organizing skills.  The trial support group, January to February 2016, received positive feedback from all group members.  For this proposed study, the group will meet weekly for 10 weeks, between May and July 2016.  Both authors will facilitate each 90-minute session.  The group will be closed to a maximum of 7 individuals.  At the end of the session participants will complete a feedback survey rating their satisfaction with the session, motivation to declutter, and confidence in their ability to change. At the conclusion of the 10 weeks participants will fill out a survey regarding the benefits gained from attending the group. The goal of this research is to highlight the importance of a formal support group in treating chronic disorganization and create a curriculum that may be followed by clinicians working with individuals who suffer from chronic disorganization and/or hoarding disorder.

 


 

Awarded to:

Delinda Free, M.S.W. and Matthew Strickland, M.S.W., Masters Program, Social Work, Portland State University School of Social Work, Portland, Oregon, USA

For the research project:

My Clutter, My Story:  A Photovoice Exploration of Quality of Life

Proposal Abstract

Hoarding and excessive clutter are the subject of now hundreds of research articles, dozens of episodes of television programs, countless cartoons and catch-phrases such as “she’s such a hoarder.” The individuals who engage in hoarding and cluttering behaviors are often singularly and narrowly defined and lack the ability to share their view and voice around a situation that impacts them most intimately. In an effort to standardize the study of hoarding and understand the problem more effectively, the perspective of people who hoard and clutter is sometimes lost amidst the data and professionalism. In this small-scale qualitative study using the person-centered empowering data collection method of Photovoice, people with hoarding and cluttering behavior will share their perspective on their quality of life. The findings from this study may be useful to other sufferers, family members, human service providers and policy makers.