Nebraska Universities Awarded $9 Million NSF Grant to Support Development of Informatics Infrastructure

An EPSCoR (Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research) grant

from the National Science Foundation is providing $9 million over the next

three years and will develop an informatics infrastructure at Nebraska

universities in a number of important areas, including bioinformatics.

EPSCoR grant programs are available to states with smaller federal research

budgets and are awarded to enable those states to be more competitive at

the national level.

Ten states competed in the current round of NSF competition and only

six were funded, said Royce Ballinger, Ph.D., director of the EPSCoR program

in Nebraska and principal investigator for the grant. Dr. Ballinger also

is assistant executive vice president and provost for the University of

Nebraska central administration.

The award is the largest NSF grant ever received by the EPSCoR program.

It provides funding for four major infrastructure development components

including bioinformatics, bioinformatics networking, security for information

distribution systems, and resource planning for manufacturing.

“The NSF grant is a wonderful opportunity to enhance infrastructures

and strengthen intercampus collaborations in a wide variety of disciplines,

Dr. Ballinger said. “Nebraska is fortunate to be eligible to compete in

the federal agency EPSCoR programs. The statewide EPSCoR Committee has

done a wonderful job in integrating campus ideas into the NSF grant that

was funded.”

Since Nebraska was designated as an EPSCoR state in 1991, Dr. Ballinger

said the state has received more than $59 million in EPSCoR funding.

The EPSCoR program has truly had a major impact on our state, Dr.

Ballinger said. It has provided valuable funding to allow us to pursue

many different research projects that have been outside our normal range

of funding.

One of the key elements of the most recent EPSCoR grant is to facilitate

the development of the Nebraska Informatics Center for the Life Sciences.

The NICLS will combine the biocomputing resources (computer clusters, software

and databases on biologically important molecules) at three University

of Nebraska campuses (the University of Nebraska Medical Center, the University

of Nebraska-Lincoln and the University of Nebraska at Omaha) and Creighton

University. This project spans three years and is headed by Simon Sherman,

Ph.D., associate professor at the Eppley Institute for Research in Cancer

& Allied Diseases at UNMC.

A formal proposal to establish the NICLS will be taken to the University

of Nebraska Board of Regents in the near future.

Dr. Sherman said informatics for the life sciences is a field that deals

with biological and chemical information, data and knowledge, along with

storage, retrieval and management to allow for optimal use for problem

solving and decision making. The field has arisen from a confluence of

the life sciences, computer sciences and mathematical sciences.

The main component of the NICLS is a new computing infrastructure for

the storage, retrieval and processing of large sources of biological and

chemical data. The infrastructure will be built on the basis of grid computing

technology and will allow researchers and students from the universities

to use the shared biocomputing resources directly from their workplaces

by logging on to the shared system. Users will access these resources via

the Internet.

Dr. Sherman said the Nebraska universities were previously maintaining

and using only their own research databases and scientific equipment. This

new infrastructure will eliminate the duplication of work as well as the

cost of purchasing and maintaining cutting-edge equipment.  

Unfortunately, at present, none of the Nebraska universities can afford

to have access to all of these advanced technologies on their own, Dr.

Sherman said. By integrating our resources, Nebraska will have the chance

to be more competitive in the research arena and for funding opportunities

as well.

The center also will provide maintenance for the hardware and software

of the system, educational opportunities for students and faculty as well

as a forum for research collaboration among the four participating universities.

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