Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 119— - NATIONAL ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE INITIATIVE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES › § 9451
The Director of the National Science Foundation must pay for research and teaching about artificial intelligence (AI) and related fields. The NSF will give competitive grants and awards to colleges, nonprofits, and groups of partners. The funding will support AI research (including work across different fields), trustworthy AI, and AI that helps science and society. NSF must use existing programs, work with other federal agencies, improve AI teaching from K-12 through college and workforce training, and try to get more people involved, including those named in sections 1885a and 1885b of title 42. The NSF will build partnerships with universities, federal labs, state and local governments, tribes, industry, and users. It must make sure researchers can use computing and cloud resources, hold prize competitions, coordinate work inside NSF, give guidance on data sharing under existing standards, consider international collaboration, and allow grant budgets to pay for software engineering help. Congress also says AI research can raise ethical, social, safety, and security risks early on. The NSF must study governance and, within 6 months after a National Academies study is published, report to Congress on whether applicants should submit an ethics or risk statement. NSF will fund AI education programs that build a diverse AI workforce, teach about risks, support curriculum and technology ethics, expand K-12 access for underserved areas and groups, and help the public understand AI. NSF will fund programs to hire and keep tenure-track or tenured AI faculty (including salary for up to three years) at eligible institutions (HBCUs, Tribal and other minority-serving schools, high-research doctorate universities, or schools in EPSCoR-eligible states). It will fund fellowships for social science, ethics, and law faculty to work with AI researchers (including up to one year of salary and training costs). NSF will set up national education centers for AI training and certifications. NSF ran a 5-year pilot program starting January 1, 2021, using short proposals and faster review, with AI as the first topic and the option to add other fast-moving topics important to U.S. economy and security. The law authorizes these funds for NSF: $868,000,000 for FY2021; $911,400,000 for FY2022; $956,970,000 for FY2023; $1,004,820,000 for FY2024; and $1,055,060,000 for FY2025.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 9451
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73