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Division Director: NSF CISE CCF

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1 Division Director: NSF CISE CCF
Opportunities at the US National Science Foundation, CISE Directorate, CCF Division Jack Snoeyink, Rahul Shah, Tracy Kimbrel Program Directors: NSF CISE CCF Algorithmic Foundations Rao Kosaraju Division Director: NSF CISE CCF June 18, 2016

2 NSF CISE Can describe CISE by the money… (FY16 request)

3 Snapshot of CISE FY 2015 Activities

4 Who is the CISE Community?
Or by the community it serves. CISE funds Pis in many disciplines

5 NSF Support of Academic Basic Research as % of US Federal Support:

6 Rao Kosaraju, Computing & Communication Foundations Division Director Tracy Kimbrel, Rahul Shah, Jack Snoeyink, Algorithmic Foundations Cluster

7 Computing & Communication Foundations (CCF)
Supports research and education projects that explore the foundations of computing and communication devices. Algorithmic Foundations (AF): Innovative research characterized by algorithmic thinking and algorithm design, accompanied by rigorous mathematical analysis. Tracy Kimbrel, Rahul Shah and I work closely together Communications and Information Foundations (CIF): Transformative research addressing the theoretical underpinnings and current and future enabling technologies for information acquisition, transmission, and processing in communication and information networks. Software and Hardware Foundations (SHF): Foundational research essential to advance the capability of computing systems, including software and hardware components, systems, and other artifacts. The AF cluster is where I sit: includes numerical methods and computational geometry. Overlapping mandate with DMS computational mathematics, so we talk across the divisions. Proposal evaluation: -Peer review by panels of experts.

8 For a comprehensive list of CISE funding opportunities, visit:
CISE Core Programs Program Solicitations: CCF: NSF CNS: NSF IIS: NSF Project Types: Large: up to $3,000,000; up to 5 years, collaborative teams Medium: up to $1,200,000; up to 4 years, multi-investigator teams Small: up to $500,000; up to 3 years, one or two investigators CISE-wide Submission Windows: Medium: Sept 16, 2016 Large: Sept 26, 2016 Small: Nov 18, 2016 DMS also earlier: November 16-December 1 PI Limit: Participate in no more than 2 “core” proposals/year Core Program as % of Funding ~65% ( > other divs) Core Program Success Rate (4yrs) 24-26% ( > other divs) Coordinated Solicitations Small: US - Israel joint projects NSF - BSF agreement Projects reviewed at NSF and checked by BSF. (Diff from BSF’s travel program.) Exploring possibility with DFG of similar program with Germany. These deadlines just passed For a comprehensive list of CISE funding opportunities, visit:

9 Sample of CISE Cross-Cutting Programs
For a comprehensive list of CISE funding opportunities, visit: FY15: Funded 15 of 75 proposals FY16: In process – news in July Cross-Division Algorithms in the Field (AitF): Advancing algorithmic design & the application areas to which the algorithms are being deployed Expeditions in Computing: new frontiers in computing and info science Exploiting Parallelism and Scalability (XPS): Supporting groundbreaking research in parallel computing Cross-Directorate/Cross-Agency Smart & Connected Health: Advance health and healthcare technology through research in information science, technology, behavior, cognition, sensors, robotics, bioimaging and engineering. BigData: Developing tools to manage and analyze data in order to extract knowledge from data National Robotics Initiative (NRI): Developing the next generation of collaborative robots to enhance personal safety, health, and productivity. Cross-cutting refers to any program managed by more than one division, directorate, or agency as indicated.

10 Algorithms in the Field (AitF)
Advancing algorithmic design together with the application areas in which algorithms are being deployed Encourages closer collaboration between theoretical computer science and applied researchers. Bridge gap between theory&practice in design, analysis, implementation, evaluation of algorithms. NSF Proposal Deadline: Mar 3, 2016 CCF rep: Tracy Kimbrel New solicitation for FY16 just posted today. This was a new program in FY 2015 that aimed to support groundbreaking research that bridges the gap between theory and practice in design, analysis, implementation, and evaluation of algorithms. Encourages closer collaboration between theoretical computer science researchers and applied researchers including a combination of systems and domain experts Research outcomes should be of interest to both theory and applied communities. FY15: Funded 15 of 75 proposals Images courtesy of Joseph Mitchell, SUNY at Stony Brook

11 NSF 16-517 Deadline: Mar 7, 2016 CCF rep: Jack Snoeyink
More agencies added, which is why we don’t know when the newest solicitation will be coming out, but it should be soon. (Dec 15). Deadline will be 90 days after solicitation. See or prior solicitation

12 BigData Critical Techniques, Technologies and Methodologies for Advancing Foundations and Applications of Big Data Sciences and Engineering NSF Deadline: Feb 9, 2016 CCF rep: Rahul Shah

13 GRFP: Graduate Research Fellowship Program
For Students to apply for: GRFP: Graduate Research Fellowship Program ugrad or beginning grad US or permanent resident NSF total 2000, CISE 103 (ENG ~ 500, BIO > 500) Faculty: serve on GRFP panels: For Faculty to apply for: NSF Research Traineeship (NRT – replaced IGERT) Traineeship: $3M up to 5 years. Innovations: $300K-500K, 2-3 yrs Priority theme: Data-enabled science and engineering

14 National Initiatives INFEWS (March 2016) Smart Cities (September 2015)
National Strategic Computing Initiative (July 2015) Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative (April 2013) US Ignite Initiative (June 2012) National Big Data Research and Development Initiative (March 2012) National Robotics Initiative (June 2011)

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16 Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP)
Five year award – $138,000 Three years of support $ 34,000 Stipend per year $ 12,000 Educational allowance to institution Who is eligible? U.S. citizens and permanent residents Undergrad & beginning grad students Deadlines: Oct./Nov. We want to emphasize the Graduate Research Fellowship Program. Here are the basics – students get a stipend of $34000 per year, and they get three years worth of support but have five years to use it. They need to still be enrolled, and find other support if they defer it for a year or two. Eligibility is restricted to citizens and permanent residents. The deadlines are in October or November. Information: and

17 CISE and GRFP GRFP: 2000 awards/year
BIO: > 500 Engineering: ~ 500 ~ 16,000 applications/year overall CISE: ~ Encourage seniors and beginning grads to apply! Volunteer to serve on panels: Here are numbers on applications. The funding rate of 12.5% should be taken with a grain of salt, like the core programs. Good, qualified applicants have a much higher chance of getting an award. We’d really like to see more applicants not just in theory but in all of computer science, so please let your students know and spread the word about this program.

18 Other opportunities CAREER Proposal Writing Workshop, Apr 4, CRII: in first three years, student support only. NSF , deadline 10 Aug 2016 REU: supplements to support undergrad research Student travel to conferences/workshops International collaboration, software sustainability, ...

19 Opportunities for Community Engagement!
Talk to your Program Director Volunteer to be a panelist Suggest workshops in exciting new areas Identify Research Highlights Suggest improvements to NSF processes. Join NSF to serve as a program director or division director.

20 Credits Copyrighted material used under Fair Use. If you are the copyright holder and believe your material has been used unfairly, or if you have any suggestions, feedback, or support, please contact: Except where otherwise indicated, permission is granted to copy, distribute, and/or modify all images in this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation license, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation license” ( The inclusion of a logo does not express or imply the endorsement by NSF of the entities' products, services, or enterprises.


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