Return-Path: Sender: To: CNI-ANNOUNCE Date: Fri, 25 May 2007 09:15:01 -0400 Message-ID: X-Original-Return-Path: Received: from [160.39.243.73] (HELO [192.100.21.10]) by cni.org (CommuniGate Pro SMTP 5.1.8) with ESMTPS id 26984111 for cni-announce@cni.org; Fri, 25 May 2007 08:16:27 -0400 Mime-Version: 1.0 X-Original-Message-Id: X-Original-Date: Fri, 25 May 2007 05:17:28 -0700 X-Original-To: cni-announce@cni.org From: Clifford Lynch Subject: NSF Solicitation on Virtual Organizations for the Engineering Community Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed" I wanted to share this announcement, which I picked up from Bill St. Arnaud of CANARIE's invaluable CAnet-news list (see http://lists.canarie.ca/mailman/listinfo/news). It's an NSF solicitation for Virtual Organizations to support Engineering disciplines and very much part of the overall cyberinfrastructure agenda; however, it's listed on the Engineering page of the NSF web site rather than the Office of Cyberinfrastructure page (at least when I last looked) so some CNI-announce readers may have missed this. I've reproduced the summary below; full details can be found at: http://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=501057&org=ENG&from=home Clifford Lynch Director, CNI ------------------------------------------------- Engineering Virtual Organization Grants (EVO) Program Solicitation NSF 07-558 Engineering Virtual Organization (EVO) Grants Synopsis of Program: The primary purpose of this solicitation is to promote the development of Virtual Organizations (VO's) for the engineering community (EVOs). A VO is created by a group of individuals whose members and resources may be dispersed globally, yet who function as a coherent unit through the use of cyberinfrastructure (CI). EVOs will extend beyond small collaborations and individual departments or institutions to encompass wide-ranging, geographically dispersed activities and groups. This approach has the potential to revolutionize the conduct of science and engineering research, education, and innovation. These systems provide shared access to centralized or distributed resources, such as community-specific sets of tools, applications, data, and sensors, and experimental operations, often in real time. With the access to enabling tools and services, self-organizing communities can create VOs to facilitate scientific workflows; collaborate on experiments; share information and knowledge; remotely operate instrumentation; run numerical simulations using shared computing resources; dynamically acquire, archive, e-publish, access, mine, analyze, and visualize data; develop new computational models; and deliver unique learning, workforce-development, and innovation tools. Most importantly, each VO design can originate within a community and be explicitly tailored to meet the needs of that specific community. At the same time, to exploit the full power of cyberinfrastructure for a VO's needs, research domain experts need to collaborate with CI professionals who have expertise in algorithm development, systems operations, and application development. This program solicitation requests proposals for two-year seed awards to establish EVOs. Proposals must address the EVO organizing principle, structure, shared community resources, and research and learning goals; a vision for organizing the community, including international partners; a vision for preparing the CI components needed to enable those goals; a plan to obtain and document user requirements formally; and a project management plan for developing both a prototype implementation and a conceptual design of a full implementation. These items will be used as criteria for evaluation along with the standard NSF criteria of Intellectual Merit and Broader Impacts. Within the award size constraints, the prototype implementation should provide proof of concept with a limited number of its potential CI features. Successful proposals should expect to demonstrate the benefits of a fully functional EVO and how it will catalyze both large and small connections, circumventing the global limitations of geography and time zones.