the academic impact of nees ian buckle university of nevada reno
TRANSCRIPT
The Academic Impact of NEES
Ian BuckleUniversity of Nevada Reno
In the beginning…
• NEES was born out of a critical need to have advanced, large-scale, experimental capabilities in the U.S. to:– accelerate earthquake risk reduction– validate numerical simulation tools that were far
more sophisticated than experimental tools at that time
– catch up with the rest of the world, principally Japan, Taiwan, and Europe
In the beginning…
• NEES was a culture shift from Day One:– Distributed facilities at a scale not seen before…
anywhere (shake tables, centrifuges, hybrid labs, field testing, wave basin…) with annual operating grants
– Facilities operated under ‘shared-use’ agreement with NSF through NEESinc and later NEEScomm
– Facilities had telepresence capabilities to enable remote usage /shared use
In the beginning…
• NEES was a culture shift from Day One:– Data and metadata required to be uploaded to a
repository for public release…– Multi-disciplinary/multi-institutional research teams
funded– Numerical simulation /high performance computing
tools supported– Educational/outreach mandate, both national and
international• The NEES Collaboratory was born
10 years later…
• What has been the academic impact?• From two points of view– Research and researchers– Facilities and capabilities
10 years later… researchers
• Priceless opportunity to work in state-of-the-art facilities to: – push the boundaries of knowledge– work in multidisciplinary teams / expand research
horizons through synergistic efforts– attract the best and brightest students to advance
earthquake engineering and accelerate earthquake risk reduction (more than 200 PhD students supported)
Research projects completed
Site NEESR, Pre-NEESR and Payload Non- NEESR Shared Use Industry Total
Buffalo 22 3 89 114Cornell 4 1 0 5Illinois 14 1 0 15Lehigh 11 9 3 23
Minnesota 14 0 0 14UNR 18 4 34 56
Oregon State 13 3 26 42RPI 9 4 9 22
UC Berkeley 14 1 2 17UC Davis 14 8 6 28
UCLA 12 10 1 23UCSD 11 4 2 17UCSB 3 1 0 4Texas 15 13 14 42
Total (2002-2013) 174 62 186 422
- Julio Ramirez
Publications referencing NEES research
NEES Student participation (completed degree)
- Julio Ramirez
Data within Project Warehouse
- Julio Ramirez
Curation of Experiments on NEEShub
12/2007 12/2008 12/2009 12/2010 12/2011 12/2012 09/2013
Archived 0 0 0 0 0 2 18
Complete 10 79 211 380 460 692 1246
Current 0 12 1 8 42 94 98
Noncompliant 8 34 22 60 111 198 102
100
300
500
700
900
1100
1300
1079
211
380460
692
1246
8 34 2260
111198
102
Curation progress at NEES N
umbe
r of
cur
ated
exp
erim
ents
- Julio Ramirez
• Red dots represent researchers and students browsing NEEShub, watching videos, and taking courses while performing 840,656 web and 38,854 tool sessions between August 2010 and April 2013.
• Yellow dots represent users who are running simulations. • Dot size corresponds to the number of users at a location.
Global Impact of NEEShub Cyberinfrastructure
- Julio Ramirez
Workforce development – NEESR students
31%
25%
41%
3%
NEES student participation (completed degree)
Ph.D. M.S.U/G Post Doc
workforce academic unknown
Ph.D. 0.3 0.62 0.08
M.S. 0.32 0.5 0.18
5%
15%
25%
35%
45%
55%
65%
Where are the alumni of NEESR research projects?
% o
f Tot
al
- Julio Ramirez
Signature Research Projects
10-years later… facilities
• Pushing the boundaries of experimentation
10-years later… facilities
• Advanced data acquisition/visualization tools• Calibrated instrumentation and equipment• Accreditation (in some cases)• Maintained equipment • Enhanced safety culture• Stable funding for laboratory personnel• Site Administrators (scheduling, facilitating access
by off-site researchers…)• Four new laboratories – bricks and mortar
In the beginning…
• NEES was born out of a critical need to have advanced, large-scale, experimental capabilities in the U.S. to:– accelerate earthquake risk reduction– validate numerical simulation tools that were far
more sophisticated than experimental tools at that time
– catch up with the rest of the world, principally Japan, Taiwan, and Europe
Summary
Thank You