Abstract

Many universities invest substantial resources in the design, deployment, and maintenance of campus-based cyberinfrastructure. To justify the expense, it is important that university administrators and others understand and communicate the value of these internal investments in terms of scholarly impact as measured by external funding, publications, and research collaborations. This paper introduces two visualizations and their usage in the Value Analytics (VA) module for Open XD Metrics on Demand (XDMoD). The VA module was developed by Indiana University’s (IU) Research Technologies division in conjunction with IU’s Cyberinfrastructure for Network Science Center (CNS) and the University at Buffalo’s Center for Computational Research (CCR). It interrelates quantitative measures of information technology (IT) usage, external funding, and publications in support of IT strategic decision making. This paper details the data, analysis workflows, and visual mappings used in the two VA visualizations that aim to communicate the value of different IT usage in terms of NSF and NIH funding, resulting publications, and associated research collaborations. To illustrate the feasibility of measuring IT values on research, we measured its financial and academic impact from the period between 2012 and 2017. The financial return on investment (ROI) is measured in terms of the funding, totaling $ 21,016,055 for NIH and NSF projects, and the academic ROI constitutes 1,531 NIH and NSF awards and 968 publications associated with 83 NSF and NIH awards. In addition, the results show that Medical Specialties, Brain Research, and Infectious Diseases are the top three scientific disciplines ranked by their publication records during the given time period.

Highlights

  • Access to high-performance computing (HPC) systems and advanced cyberinfrastructure (CI) generally is critical to advance research in many scholarly fields

  • The visualizations aim to help stakeholders understand the financial return on investment (ROI) measured in terms of total acquired funding and academic ROI measured by publications associated with these awards

  • The XD metrics on demand (XDMoD) portal is an interactive dashboard with an intuitive graphical interface to XDMoD metrics such as number of jobs, service units charged, central processing unit (CPU) used, or wait time (Furlani et al, 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Access to high-performance computing (HPC) systems and advanced cyberinfrastructure (CI) generally is critical to advance research in many scholarly fields. Over the last 30 years, supercomputing has expanded from a few monolithic and extremely fast computing systems into a comprehensive “set of organizational practices, technical infrastructure and social norms that collectively provide for the smooth operation of research and education work at a distance” (Towns et al, 2014). This new form of CI (Stewart et al, 2017) is used by a large number of researchers, scholars, and artists and is more complicated, including HPC, storage systems, networks, and visualization systems. Visualizations help communicate the value of CI to diverse stakeholders ranging from domain experts to academic deans to financial administrators

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