← Leaderboards
Fernando De La Torre
Carnegie-Mellon University
$1,030,279
Attributed
$2,799,832
Total exposure
4
Grants
1
Lead (contact PI)
Attributed= this PI's even-split share of every grant they're on (the fair, additive number). Exposure = full size of all those grants.
Funding over time
peak $966.5K · FY2009–25$1M$750K$500K$250K$0
'09
'10
'11
'12
'13
'14
'15
'16
'17
'18
'19
'20
'21
'22
'23
'24
'25
Funding mix
By agency
NIH$2,799,832 · 4
By mechanism
R01$1,656,269 · 2
RC1$948,648 · 1
R21$194,915 · 1
Top collaborators
- Ashok J Bharucha2 shared
- Avniel S Ghuman2 shared
- Alexander Hauptmann2 shared
- Charles E Schroeder2 shared
- Howard D Wactlar2 shared
- Justin T Baker1 shared
Most similar at Carnegie-Mellon University
Same institution · by research overlap
- Matthew A Smith$8,729,786
- Alexander Hauptmann$237,162
- Howard D Wactlar$237,162
- Maria Zdenka Chroneos$108,512
- Bryan Wilder$267,868
Others in their field
Top investigators on “Measurement”
- Lawrence Corey · Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center$517,278,507
- Margaret Juliana McElrath · Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center$468,973,477
- David R. Weir · University Of Michigan At Ann Arbor$403,695,976
- Glenda E Gray · Wits Health Consortium (Pty), Ltd$297,689,086
- Christopher McKay · Battelle Memorial Institute$290,340,771
- David H Reitze · University Of Florida$256,180,831
Research focus
MeasurementBehaviorMachine LearningMental DisordersSocialResponsePatternMotionAffectiveMotorSocial InteractionAlgorithmsMapsBaseImageMonitorFacial ExpressionCaringDiagnosisGoldEmotionsFaceComputer FrameworkBehavioral
Grant awards (6)
Active Social Vision: How the Brain Processes Visual Information During Natural Social Perception$689,799
R01 · FY2025 · MH
Active Social Vision: How the Brain Processes Visual Information During Natural Social Perception$689,799
R01 · FY2024 · MH
SCH: INT: Collaborative Research: Context-Adaptive Multimodal Informatics for Psychiatric Discharge Planning$276,671
R01 · FY2024 · MH
Face De-Identification for Research and Clinical Use$194,915
R21 · FY2014 · MH · contact PI
AUTOMATED METHODS TO SUPPORT THE DETECTION OF DEPRESSION IN DEMENTIA$454,869
RC1 · FY2010 · MH
AUTOMATED METHODS TO SUPPORT THE DETECTION OF DEPRESSION IN DEMENTIA$493,779
RC1 · FY2009 · MH