Title: The NSF Advisory Committee on Cyberinfrastructure
1The NSF Advisory Committee on Cyberinfrastructure
- Kelvin K. Droegemeier
- (kkd_at_ou.edu)
- School of Meteorology and Center for Analysis and
Prediction of Storms - University of Oklahoma
2Charge
- Evaluate the current PACI programs
- Recommend new areas of emphasis for the CISE
Directorate - Recommend an Implementation Plan to Enact
Recommended Changes
3The History of Planning at NSF
CSE research elsewhere in NSF
Support for an array of small, medium, and large
CISE basic research projects
1995
CISE Directorate
Current REPORT
Computational Science init. Expanded equip.
program.
Hayes Report
Provision of advanced scientific computing
5 Supercomputer Centers, NSFnet,
PACI NCSA NPACI
1984
Terascale Computing Initiatives
Lax -gtCurtis/Bardon Reports
1993 BRPDesktop to Teraflop
4Cyberinfrastructure?
- Traditional infrastructure infrastructure is
required for an industrial economy.
Cyberinfrastructure is required for an
information economy. - Cyberinfrastructure refers to an infrastructure
based upon computer, information and
communication technology that is required for
discovery, dissemination, and preservation of
knowledge - High-end computers
- Fast, adaptable networks
- Software tools and applications
- Data repositories
- Collaboration tools
- Education and training
5Cyberinfrastructure
6Knowledge Frontiers
- Several recent projects provide a glimpse of
cyberinfrastructure
7Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation
Remote Users
Instrumented Structures and Sites
High-Performance Network(s)
Laboratory Equipment
Field Equipment
Curated Data Repository
Leading Edge Computation
Remote Users
Laboratory Equipment
Global Connections
8Information Sources
- Community-wide web survey
- Widely publicized
- gt700 responses
- Quantitative comparisons with the Hayes Report
- Oral public testimony (3 sessions)
- 62 participants selected from research
scientists and engineers computer and
computational scientists center directors
agency and corporate leaders system
administrators educators students and young
scientists technicians and consultants - Emphasis given to traditionally underrepresented
groups and the physically challenged - Written transcripts and A/V materials assembled
- Dozens of prior reports unsolicited emails/calls
- 250 pages of written critique from 60 reviewers
- Hundreds of hours of deliberation and discussion
among Panel members
9Major Recommendations
- The NSF should take the lead in charting a
national course for cyber infrastructure an
Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Initiative (ACI) to
create, deploy, and apply CI in ways that
radically empower all scientific and engineering
research and allied education - Must be a large, long-term concerted effort (1B
new dollars), not a linear extension of existing
activities - Must be carefully organized and managed
- Human capital should be considered a co-equal
with traditional physical infrastructure - High-end resources available to the US academic
research community should be second to none
(doesnt neglect low end or mid-sized resources
MREFC inadequate) - Physical infrastructure must be maintained for
the long haul NSF cant keep thinking of
resources like PACI as research or as an
experiment that frequently is re-competed - Must fill the emerging need for a new IT
professional - Give emphasis to underrepresented groups, the
physically challenged, and remote users
(digital divide)
10A 1B Investment of New Funds
11Fundamental and Applied Research to Advance CI
- 30 Projects at 2M/year (average)
- Single investigators and teams (e.g., SRB)
- Topics
- Human-computer interactions
- Data base systems
- Networks
- Parallel computing
- Architectures
- Security
- Reliability
- Interoperability
- IP
12A 1B Investment of New Funds
13Application of IT to Domain Science and
Engineering Research
- 50 Projects at 2M/year (average)
- Long-term (5 years)
- Single investigators and teams
- Domain-specific scientists working with computer
and computational scientists, mathematicians,
technologists - Similar in concept to current ITR
14A 1B Investment of New Funds
15Acquisition and Development of CI and Applications
- 20 Software Development Projects at 5M/year
(average) - Develop production software, commercialize,
maintain, upgrade - 10 CI Software Centers (10M/year average)
- Focus on specific community-wide issues, e.g.,
- Grid computing
- Compilers
- Run time systems
- Visualization
- Programming environments
- Parallel file systems
- Human-computer interfaces
16A 1B Investment of New Funds
17Provisioning of Resources
- 5 high-end general-purpose computational centers
(75M each, or 2x current level per center) - 75 data repositories (average of 2M/year)
- Mostly disciplinary but interoperable
- 5 data technology development centers (3M/year
each) - 10 discipline-specific teams for meta data
standards, formats, tools at 2M/year each - Increase digital libraries from 10M to 30M/year
for 1-3M/annual projects - 60M/year for high-speed backbones
- 5 application service centers at 2M/year each
for non-computational applications, cluster
computing, etc
18Cyberinfrastructure Diversity
Capability not just capacity technology,
policy, tools. Still need some center-based
leading- edge,super computers.
On-demand supercomputing,not just batch.
19Is the Pyramid Still Valid?
- Most feel that it is, though broadening needs to
occur below the peak - Especially strong sentiment from PACI User
Advisory Committees - Some argue for a single, extremely powerful
cycle shop, with other funding directed toward
campuses for the purchase of local machines - Its clear that increasing emphasis must be
placed on data - Acquisition (sensing)
- Generation (numerical simulations)
- Cataloging (meta data)
- Analysis/processing (mining)
- Storage and stewardship (including legacy and
traditionally non-digital information) - Interoperability (technical and among disciplines)
20Recommended Organizational Structure Within the
NSF
- An ACI Program Office (APO), managed in a matrix
fashion overlaid on existing NSF structure, with
a highly placed, credible leader will be charged
with - Serving as a national ACI coordinator
- Managing the ACI budget/priorities
- Linking ACI activities among directorates and
funding them the ACPO does not fund
investigators or projects directly, but funds
directorates, each of which develops its own
initiatives - CISE takes a lead role in infrastructure and
applications identifies common needs among
directorates - ACPO director reports to a steering committee of
ADs, chaired by the CISE AD - Workshop held May 14-15 AG session on May 16 to
discuss management models broadly defined
21http//www.si.umich.edu/cyberrequest
22Recommended Future of PACI within the ACI
- Two-year extension of current PACI program
through 2004 - Until 2007 (10 years from start of program),
PACIs and PSC should be assured of stable
funding to provide high-end resources and
associated operations - Important to retain skilled PACI staff and
successful collaborations dont want a mass
exodus! - 2004 or 2005 ACI funding begins
- Separate peer-reviewed enabling and application
infrastructure projects EOT - PACIs can compete for all aspects of the larger
ACI funding
23Current Status at NSF
- Solicitation for new Extensible Terascale
Facilities Partners (proposals were due 9 June
panel on 26-27 June) - Funds connection and integration
- Archival repositories
- Digital libraries
- Computational resources
- Sensor networks
- PACI transition period (March 03 September
04) - 1-year extension of Cooperative Agreements
- Maintain technology thrusts
- Support resource partners encourage
participation in ETF program - Increase support for Domain-Specific Cybertools
via FY04 ITR focus area reduce funding through
PACI - Fund terascale operations through September 04
24Current Status at NSF
- Many Directorates/Advisory Committees are in the
process of planning for cyberinfrastructure
25Current Status at NSF
26Current Status at NSF
- Within the Geosciences Directorate
- Efforts underway within each division
- Atmospheric Sciences (ATM)
- Ocean Sciences (OCE)
- Earth Sciences (EAR)
- Approach in ATM as you begin your own planning
- Open letter to the community (completed)
- Regional focus group meetings to obtain broad
input on - State of the art
- Key issues of broad relevance
- Recommendations to NSF for funding and
implementation/management - Tentative locations Washington, DC Atlanta,
GA Champaign, IL Boulder, CO Seattle, WA San
Diego, CA - Final report to be submitted to GEO AD
27Current Status at NSF
- Cyberinfrastructure initiative likely will be
more than traditional priority area efforts
(e.g., Nano, Biocomplexity, Math, ITR) - Hopefully will be sustained CI is a very
different animal - We all have an opportunity to shape its direction
- Your workshop is extremely important and timely
- A couple of suggestions
- Be sure to communicate with and think about other
disciplines - Be sure to participate in the management models
sessions or give input via the web - Working document on May workshop is in
preparation - 23 June 2003 via Access Grid (3 pm EDT)
(coordinated with Global Grid Forum)
28http//www.si.umich.edu/cyber