Title: What
1Whats New in CISEStatus Report andReflections
- Gregory R. Andrews
- Professor, Computer Science, Univ. of Arizona
- Former Division Director, Computer and Network
Systems, National Science Foundation - February 2005
2Outline
- NSF context
- The CISE Directorate
- Programs, trends, and plans
- Reflections and lessons learned
3National Science Foundation (NSF)
- Created in 1950
- to promote the progress of science to advance
the national health, prosperity, and welfare to
secure the national defense and for other
purposes - Roles
- Support basic research
- Train the next generation
- Educate the public
- Advise the government on science policy
4Federal Support for Research
- National Science Foundation (NSF)
- Curiosity-driven basic research
- Long term
- National Institutes of Health (NIH)
- Use-inspired basic research
- Long term
- Mission Agencies DARPA, DOE, NASA, etc.
- Applied research
- Shorter term
5Pasteurs Quadrant
Basic research (Bohr) NSF 1950 2005 Use-inspired basic research (Pasteur) NIH
Applied research (Edison) Mission Agencies
6NSF Organization
Administrative Offices
7NSF Crosscutting Initiatives for 2005
- Biocomplexity in the Environment
- Nanoscale Science and Engineering
- Mathematical Sciences
- Human and Social Dynamics
- Information Technology Research - ended as an
initiative in 2004
8Computer and Information Science and Engineering
(CISE)
- Created in 1985 (out of MPS)
- Three research divisions
- Two infrastructure divisions supercomputing and
networking - Office of cross-disciplinary activities
- Minor reorganization in 1997
- 5 Divisions CCR, EIA, IIS, ACIR, ANIR
- Major reorganization in 2003
- 4 Divisions CCF, CNS, IIS, SCI
9CISE Responsibilities
- Support basic research and education in computer
and information science and engineering - Support a shared cyberinfrastructure for all of
science and engineering
10New CISE Organization
11Key Concept Cluster
- Comprehensive activity in a coherent area of
research and education - Team of program officers and staff working
closely with the community - Initially group of existing programs
- By end of FY05 one program per cluster
12Computing and Communication Foundations (CCF)
- Formal and Mathematical Foundations
- Computer science theory numerical computing
computational algebra and geometry signal
processing and communication - Foundations of Computing Processes and Artifacts
- Software engineering software tools for HPC
programming languages compilers computer
architecture graphics and visualization - Emerging Models for Technology and Computation
- Computational biology quantum computing
nano-scale computing biologically inspired
computing
13CCF Competitions
- FY 2004
- Responsible for about 2030 proposals
- Heavy mortgages and NSF-wide commitments
- Decent success rates for CAREER (15) but
terrible success rates for clusters (6) - FY 2005
- Theoretical Foundations January 2005
- Emerging Models for Technology and Computation
February 2005 - Foundations of Computing Processes and Artifacts
May 2005 with awards in fall from FY 2006 budget - FY 2006 and 2007
- Possibly no competitions in FY 2006
- Fall deadlines for all three clusters in FY 2007
14Computer and Network Systems (CNS)
- Computer Systems
- Distributed systems embedded and hybrid systems
next-generation software parallel systems - Network Systems
- Networking research broadly defined plus focus
areas in programmable wireless networks and
networks of sensor systems - Computing Research Infrastructure
- Research infrastructure minority institutional
infrastructure research resources - Education and Workforce
- Curriculum development/educational innovation IT
workforce special projects cross-directorate
activities (e.g., REU sites)
15CNS Competitions
- FY 2004
- Responsible for about 2035 proposals
- Good success rates for CAREER and infrastructure
(30) - Fair success rates for research programs (18-20)
- FY 2005 One solicitation per cluster
- Computer Systems November 2004
- Network Systems January 2005
- Computing Research Infrastructure July 2005
- Education and Workforce Education with research
programs workforce subsumed by Broadening
Participation emphasis area - FY 2006
- Same deadlines as in FY 2005, but Networking in
December
16Information and Intelligent Systems (IIS)
- Systems in Context
- Human computer interaction educational
technology robotics computer-supported
cooperative work digital government - Understanding, Inference, and Data
- Databases artificial intelligence text, image,
speech, and video analysis information
retrieval knowledge systems - Science Engineering Informatics/Information
Integration - Bioinformatics geoinformatics cognitive
neuroscience data-driven science
17IIS Competitions
- FY 2004
- Responsible for about 2590 proposals
- Success rates 17 CAREER, 6 regular.
- FY 2005
- Raise success rate of 2004 to 12-15
- Science Engineering Informatics/Information
Integration and Universal Access December 2004 - Data, Inference, and Understanding and Systems in
Context May 2005 with awards in fall from FY
2006 funds - FY 2006
- Same deadlines as in FY 2005
18Shared Cyberinfrastructure (SCI)
- Cyberinfrastructure computational engines,
storage, networking, data, sensors, software, and
services to support advances in science and
engineering - Infrastructure Deployment
- Planning, construction, commissioning, and
operations - Infrastructure Development
- Creating, testing, and hardening next-generation
deployed systems
19History of NSF CI Investments
20SCI Competitions
- FY 2004
- Core funding for the PACI centers and expansion
of the Extensible Terascale Facility (ETF) - NSF Middleware Initiative (NMI) 141 proposals
20 awards - International Network Connections recently
decided - FY 2005
- Continuing support for PACI and ETF
- Cyberinfrastructure Teaching, Education,
Advancement, and Mentoring (CI-TEAM) Spring
2005 - NSF Middleware Initiative (NMI) Spring 2005
- Leveraging and coordinating shared and
domain-specific cyberinfrastructure with other
agencies and directorates
21Key Concept Emphasis Area
- Focused area of research that cuts across
clusters and divisions - Addresses a scientific and/or national priority
- Has program announcement and funds
22FY 2004 Emphasis Areas
- Cyber Trust
- Develop computing systems that operate securely
and protect sensitive information - Received 488 proposals made 50 awards got 5M
in co-funding from DARPA - Information Integration
- Integrate and mine large data repositories to
support data-driven science - Received 238 proposals made 33 awards
- Science of Design
- Develop a body of theoretical and empirical
knowledge to facilitate creation of a science of
software design - Received 182 proposals made 24 awards
23FY 2005 Emphasis Areas
- Information Integration December 2004
- Cyber Trust February 2005
- Science of Design Spring 2005
- Broadening Participation June 2005
- Support alliances and projects that have the
potential significantly to increase the number of
underrepresented students achieving college and
graduate degrees - Probably one more on High-End Computing
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27CISE FY 2005 BudgetRequest (M)
CISE Budget Lines FY 2005
CCF 91.41
CNS 132.39
IIS 92.54
SCI 123.60
ITR (cross-CISE) 178.11
CISE Total 618.05
28Reflections on Being at NSF
- My Duties
- Represent CISE in NSF and Interagency settings
- Help set CISE directions and policies
- Manage the development and execution of CNS
programs and budget - Manage CNS staff scientific and administrative
- Program Officer Duties
- Represent their discipline within CISE and NSF
- Interact with community to get input and provide
advice - Help define directions for their area of research
- Manage competitions core and cross-disciplinary
29General Observations
- Science Policy and Government Agencies
- There are lots of smart, hardworking government
employees - Each agency, including Congress, has its own
point of view and its own agenda - Budget size matters
- National Science Foundation
- Widely respected throughout government, for good
reason - There is an institutional ethic to provide
service to the scientific community - Its lots more fun when the budget is rising
(2003) than when it is falling (2004 and 2005)
30General Observations II
- CISE Directorate
- The importance of CISE is recognized within NSF
- Funding decisions truly are guided by NSFs dual
roles - Supporting good science
- Training the next generationthroughout the
country - The rapid increase in proposals has put CISE
under tremendous pressure - The scientific staff is overworked
- The peer review process is at the breaking point
- Despite the above, panels and program officers
are making good recommendations - However, few projects are adequately funded and
lots of really good work is not getting funded
31Advice
- Attributes of winning proposals
- Address important problem and have novel idea(s)
- Well written project description, good technical
depth, know the related work - Address broader impacts and describe (own) prior
work and read the proposal submission
instructions! - Interact with program officers
- Get feedback on proposals, ask for advice,
provide input - Volunteer to be a reviewer
- Consider working at NSF at some point
32Conclusion
- NSFs role is fundamental to all areas of society
the most basic future investment - Computer science and related disciplines are
hugely important in their own right and essential
to advancement in all areas of SE - NSF and our field are facing unprecedented
pressures that can only be overcome by concerted,
cooperative action
33Further Information
- CISE Web site www.cise.nsf.gov
- Computing Research News bimonthly columns
www.cra.org - Contact greg_at_cs.arizona.edu