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Mission and Activities. Malcolm Atkinson & Anna Kenway SAB Directors’ Report 11 May 2009. EPSRC review Thank you & Timetable e-Science growing importance cycle of progress interdependence e-Science Institute focus facilitation activities outcomes e-Science evolves.
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Mission and Activities Malcolm Atkinson & Anna Kenway SAB Directors’ Report 11 May 2009
EPSRC review Thank you & Timetable e-Science growing importance cycle of progress interdependence e-Science Institute focus facilitation activities outcomes e-Science evolves Facts and Figures: overview themes visitors meetings outreach (finance) Overview
Today’s Timetable 10:00 Minutes of previous meeting and matters arising 10:30 - 11:15 Directors' reports (MPA, AK) 11:15 - 11:30 Long-term Visitor Application Paper D 11:30 Theme 6: Arts & Humanities report - Stuart Dunn 12:00 Theme 10: Climate change report - Andy Kerr 12:30 - 13:30 Lunch 13:30 Theme 7: Flybrain report - Douglas Armstrong 14:00 Theme 8: Trust and security report - Andrew Martin 14:30 Theme 9: Provenance report - James Cheney 15:00 Discussion of theme proposal on 'Automated Experimentation' 15:15 Discussion on Future directions - Malcolm Atkinson 16:00 - 16:30 Coffee break SAB engagement with the EPSRC mid-term revue of the eSI 16:30 - 17:00 SAB meets with EPSRC Review Panel 17:00 Formal SAB meeting ends 17:00 - 18:30 Reception in the Chapterhouse with the Review Panel, theme leaders and others
Intertwingling Jim Austin, University of York (chair) Jeremy Frey, University of Southampton Tom Rodden, Nottingham University Sarah Fulford, EPSRC infrastructure programme
e-Science: key enabler • e-Science Systematic investigation into methods of improving research by applying advances in computation • Demand increasing • more data, more models, more uses & users • Enabler of strategic importance • LWEC, Ageing, Energy, Security, Digital Economy, … • needed for almost all research priorities • Benefits • research effectiveness in almost all disciplines • decisions, business, healthcare & policy
Cycles of Progress technologyinnovation betterresearch researchchallenge CSinnovation newchallenges
Products of Progress new capabilities research breakthroughs technologyinnovation betterresearch researchchallenge CSinnovation newchallenges new CSresults new opportunities
Goal for eSI new capabilities research breakthroughs technologyinnovation betterresearch researchchallenge CSinnovation newchallenges new CSresults new opportunities refined, re-usable and transferable e-Science methods and principles
The e-ScienceInstitute Context for eSI e-Science research computationalservices &consultancy advanced technology development pioneering projects
eSI Activities • Themes • Responsive events • Visitors • Training and Summer schools • Dissemination
e-Science Evolves • 1952 Hodgkin & Huxley use Brunsviga calculators to model “action potentials” • 1958 Denis Noble struggles to get computer access • 1971 3 structures in PDB at Brookhaven • 1980 EMBL-Bank • 1995 EBI • 2005 ESFRI roadmap: ELIXIR • 2009 Douglas Kell, CE of BBSRC, expects: • ~50% of research to be “dry” lab • >95% of research biologists to use “tools” The eSI is evolving for e-Science’s future eSI 2001
Your Homework • For today’s discussion at 15:15 • Think about how eSI should evolve • For 2011 to 2015 • I need your advice