United States federal research funders use the term cyberinfrastructure to describe research environments that support advanced
data acquisition,
data storage
Data storage is the recording (storing) of information (data) in a storage medium. Handwriting, phonographic recording, magnetic tape, and optical discs are all examples of storage media. Biological molecules such as RNA and DNA are conside ...
,
data management
Data management comprises all disciplines related to handling data as a valuable resource.
Concept
The concept of data management arose in the 1980s as technology moved from sequential processing (first punched cards, then magnetic tape) to r ...
,
data integration,
data mining,
data visualization
Data and information visualization (data viz or info viz) is an interdisciplinary field that deals with the graphic representation of data and information. It is a particularly efficient way of communicating when the data or information is num ...
and other
computing and information processing
services distributed over the
Internet beyond the scope of a single institution. In scientific usage, cyberinfrastructure is a technological and sociological solution to the problem of efficiently connecting laboratories, data, computers, and people with the goal of enabling derivation of novel scientific theories and knowledge.
Origin
The term
National Information Infrastructure had been popularized by
Al Gore
Albert Arnold Gore Jr. (born March 31, 1948) is an American politician, businessman, and environmentalist who served as the 45th vice president of the United States from 1993 to 2001 under President Bill Clinton. Gore was the Democratic Part ...
in the 1990s. This use of the term "cyberinfrastructure" evolved from the same thinking that produced
Presidential Decision Directive NSC-63 on Protecting America's Critical Infrastructures (PDD-63). PDD-63 focuses on the security and vulnerability of the nation's "cyber-based
information systems" as well as the critical infrastructures on which America's military strength and economic well-being depend, such as the electric power grid, transportation networks, potable water and wastewater infrastructures.
The term "cyberinfrastructure" was used in a press briefing on PDD-63 on May 22, 1998
with
Richard A. Clarke
Richard Alan Clarke (born October 27, 1950) is an American national security expert, novelist, and former government official. He served as the Counterterrorism Czar as the National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection, and Cou ...
, then national coordinator for security, infrastructure protection, and counter-terrorism, and
Jeffrey Hunker, who had just been named director of the critical infrastructure assurance office. Hunker stated:
"One of the key conclusions of the President's commission that laid the intellectual framework for the President's announcement today was that while we certainly have a history of some real attacks, some very serious, to our cyber-infrastructure, the real threat lay in the future. And we can't say whether that's tomorrow or years hence. But we've been very successful as a country and as an economy in wiring together our critical infrastructures. This is a development that's taken place really over the last 10 or 15 years—the Internet, most obviously, but electric power, transportation systems, our banking and financial systems."
The term "cyberinfrastructure" was used by a US
National Science Foundation (NSF) blue-ribbon committee in 2003 in response to the question: how can NSF, as the nation's premier agency funding basic
research, remove existing barriers to the rapid evolution of high performance
computing, making it truly usable by all the nation's
scientists,
engineers, scholars, and citizens? The NSF use of the term focuses on the integrated assemblage of these information technologies with one another.
A workshop on cyberinfrastructure for the social sciences was held in
San Diego, California in May 2005. Another conference was held in January 2007 in
Washington, D.C.
A "CyberInfrastructure Partnership" existed from February 2005 until 2009.
A collaboration led by the
University of Wisconsin–Madison and
Boston University had a web site called "Engaging People in Cyberinfrastructure" (EPIC) which existed from 2005 through 2007. Two NSF sponsored workshops on Financial Cyberinfrastructure were organized in 2010 and 2012 by
Louiqa Raschid and Albert "Pete" Kyle
University of Maryland, H.V. Jagadish
University of Michigan and Mark Flood
Office of Financial Research, Department of the Treasury.
Complementing the technical construction of cyberinfrastructure, social scientists in the field of
computer supported cooperative work investigate the organizational and social aspects of building these large-scale, distributed resources to support science. Related to this research space is the notion of the
collaboratory, originally coined by
William Wulf.
Cyberinfrastructure is more often called
e-Science or e-Research.
In particular, the
United Kingdom started an e-Science initiative in 2001.; the
Systems Geology
Systems geology emphasizes the nature of geology as a system – that is, as a set of interacting parts that function as a whole. The systems approach involves study of the linkages or interfaces between the component objects and processes at all ...
initiative of the
British Geological Survey
The British Geological Survey (BGS) is a partly publicly funded body which aims to advance geoscientific knowledge of the United Kingdom landmass and its continental shelf by means of systematic surveying, monitoring and research.
The BGS h ...
is an example.
Others distinguish e-Science as the work that is done using the cyberinfrastructure.
There are many inter-governmental advisory groups related to Cyberinfrastructure aspects like
E-Infrastructures Reflection Group and
European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures
European, or Europeans, or Europeneans, may refer to:
In general
* ''European'', an adjective referring to something of, from, or related to Europe
** Ethnic groups in Europe
** Demographics of Europe
** European cuisine, the cuisines of Europe a ...
dealing with policies on electronic infrastructures for research, i.e. research networks, computing, software and data infrastructures that mainly serve students, researchers and scientists. They advise and recommend actions towards the European Commission (DG CONNECT), the EU Member states governments (Research or Science Ministries), e-Infrastructure providers and users.
Examples
NSF's Office of Cyberinfrastructure, for example, supported the
TeraGrid project in which the Grid Infrastructure Group led by
University of Chicago provided integration of resources and services that were operated by some of the US's supercomputing centers. This project has now evolved to the
Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE) project, led by the
National Center for Supercomputing Applications.
The
nanoHUB and its HUBzero software originally funded in 2002 is an important cyberinfrastructure that is seeing continued usage.
Cyberinfrastructure is often specialized toward domains in science and engineering. For example, NSF funded a large cyberinfrastructure for earthquake engineering called NEEShub at Purdue University from 2009-15. NSF funded the
iPlant Collaborative
The iPlant Collaborative, renamed Cyverse in 2017, is a virtual organization created by a cooperative agreement funded by the US National Science Foundation (NSF) to create cyberinfrastructure for the plant sciences (botany). The NSF compared c ...
in 2008 to support
plant sciences
Botany, also called , plant biology or phytology, is the science of plant life and a branch of biology. A botanist, plant scientist or phytologist is a scientist who specialises in this field. The term "botany" comes from the Ancient Greek wo ...
, including data-intensive plant genomics and phylogenetics.
Mississippi State University created an Integrated Computational Materials Engineering (ICME) cyberinfrastructure in 2010 that focuses on
multiscale modeling
Multiscale modeling or multiscale mathematics is the field of solving problems which have important features at multiple scales of time and/or space. Important problems include multiscale modeling of fluids, solids, polymers, proteins, nucleic ac ...
.
The
United States Department of Energy supports e-Science through high performance computing and other initiatives involving its laboratories, including:
*
Argonne National Laboratory
Argonne National Laboratory is a science and engineering research United States Department of Energy National Labs, national laboratory operated by University of Chicago, UChicago Argonne LLC for the United States Department of Energy. The facil ...
*
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), commonly referred to as the Berkeley Lab, is a United States Department of Energy National Labs, United States national laboratory that is owned by, and conducts scientific research on behalf of, t ...
*
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, originally named the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center,
is a United States Department of Energy National Laboratory operated by Stanford University under the programmatic direction of the U.S. Departme ...
*
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
*
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
The Department of Energy (Office of Science SciDAC-2 program from the High Energy Physics, Nuclear Physics and Advanced Software and Computing Research programs) and NSF (Math and Physical Sciences, Office of Cyberinfrastructure and Office of International Science and Engineering Directorates) support the
Open Science Grid
The Open Science Grid Consortium is an organization that administers a worldwide grid of technological resources called the Open Science Grid, which facilitates distributed computing for scientific research. Founded in 2004, the consortium is com ...
which is a consortium of more than 80 member institutions and alliances.
Other examples include:
*
Open Science Grid Consortium
*
Datanet
*
Globus
*
XSEDE
TeraGrid was an e-Science grid computing infrastructure combining resources at eleven partner sites. The project started in 2001 and operated from 2004 through 2011.
The TeraGrid integrated high-performance computers, data resources and tools, an ...
*
National Center for Supercomputing Applications
*
National LambdaRail
National LambdaRail (NLR) was a , high-speed national computer network owned and operated by the U.S. research and education community. In November 2011, the control of NLR was purchased from its university membership by a billionaire Patrick Soon ...
and
Internet2
*
ICME cyberinfrastructure {{primary sources, date=September 2012
Integrated computational materials engineering (ICME) involves the integration of experimental results, design models, simulations, and other computational data related to a variety of materials used in multisc ...
See also
*
Data infrastructure
*
Grid computing
Grid computing is the use of widely distributed computer resources to reach a common goal. A computing grid can be thought of as a distributed system with non-interactive workloads that involve many files. Grid computing is distinguished from co ...
*
Collaboratory
*
Systems Geology
Systems geology emphasizes the nature of geology as a system – that is, as a set of interacting parts that function as a whole. The systems approach involves study of the linkages or interfaces between the component objects and processes at all ...
References
{{Reflist
External links
* Natural Sciences domain
*
Geosciences Network (GEON)*
National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON)*
NSF's Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI) Cyberinfrastructure*
DataONE part of NSF
Datanet initiative
* Social Sciences and Humanities domain
*
ACLS (American Council of Learned Societies) Report on Cyberinfrastructure for the Humanities & Social SciencesNSF Division of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure (ACI)
E-Science
IT infrastructure