University of Oxford

e-Infrastructure Use Cases and Service Usage Models (eIUS)

Contents

1. Welcome

A short video introduction to the eIUS Project is available.

2. Latest Project News

3. Project Outputs

Experience reports and use cases are currently available in PDF only. Videos are delivered via the Project's channel on youTube.

Table 1. Use Cases and Experience Reports
Mathematical and Physical Sciences
Astronomy Experience Report Use Case Video
Crystallography Experience Report (1)
Experience Report (2)
Use Case
Earth Sciences Experience Report Use Case Video
Electronics and Electrical Engineering Experience Report Use Case Video
Engineering Science Experience Report Use Case
Organic Chemistry Experience Report Use Case
(awaiting validation)
Video
(Engage Project)
Social Sciences
Applied Econometrics Experience Report Use Case SUM
Digital Geography Experience Report (1)
Experience Report (2)
Use Case
Human Geography Experience Report Use Case
(awaiting validation)
SUM
Medical and Life Sciences
Bioinformatics Experience Report Use Case Video
Computational Biochemistry Experience Report Use Case
Epidemiology Experience Report (1)
Experience Report (2)
Use Case
(awaiting validation)
Radiotherapy Experience Report Use Case
Arts and Humanities
Archaeology Experience Report Use Case Video
Corpus Linguistics Experience Report Use Case
Dance Studies Experience Report (1)
Experience Report (2)
Use Case
(awaiting validation)
Developing SUMs (work in progress documents)

Reports, Papers and Presentations

4. Contact

5. Summary

Project Start: 1 April 2007
Project End: 30 June 2009
Project Partners: University of Oxford, NCeSS
Project Programme: JISC e-Infrastructure Programme
JISC Theme: e-Research

6. Background/Context

The UK is entering a period in which online collaborative environments, distributed computing and data resources, advanced analytical tools, together with support and training, are becoming readily available for researchers in all disciplines. Within some subject areas, for example, high-energy physics and bioinformatics, e-infrastructure already underpins everyday work; whilst other subject areas are still investigating the applicability of existing resources for their research and making recommendations for future development. The deployment of e-infrastructure, whether within institutions, nationally or internationally, has the potential to increase the pace, impact, and efficiency of research both within and across disciplines.

If academic research in the UK is to build on the foundations laid by UK e-Science then it is essential first to understand the process by which different research communities can adopt e-infrastructure, and secondly to ensure that the required interfaces, support and training are put in place. The eIUS (pronounced 'ey-yus') project, led by Oxford University Computing Services in partnership with NCeSS and the Oxford e-Research Centre, is one of two complementary projects funded by JISC that aim to study current and planned usage of e-infrastructure, and also the perceived or actual barriers to uptake across research communities. Outcomes from the two projects will help identify and implement the appropriate interventions that will make e-Infrastructure available to a wider group of researchers.

7. Aims and Objectives

The eIUS project aims to gather and document concrete evidence of how e-infrastructure is, or is planned to be used as a facilitator of the research process across all major disciplines. This is not simply an information gathering project but rather is intended to broaden participation in the use and future development of e-infrastructure services. The project's overall objectives are to:

8. Methodology

The project intends to accomplish its objectives through an iterative process of experience capture and analysis carried out in conjunction with the UK research community. This is being carried out through a combination of interviews, focus groups, and observational studies. Three different but related types of outputs will be produced:

These outputs will be published early and often through a dedicated community engagement website, to allow for frequent review and validation by the research community and e-infrastructure service providers, as well as to enable researchers to submit new content. The project will pro-actively encourage this participation throughout its lifetime through the organisation of focus groups, workshops and other events designed specifically to engage the research community.

9. Implications/ Deliverables/ Stakeholders

The outputs of the project are expected to serve different but related stakeholder requirements:

10. Team

10.1. Project Manager

Dr Michael Fraser
Oxford University Computing Services
13 Banbury Road
Oxford
OX2 6NN
tel. +44 (0) 1865 283 343

10.2. Investigators

10.3. Research Staff

  • Gabriel Hanganu, Senior Analyst, Oxford University Computing Services
  • Meik Poschen, Research Associate, National Centre for e-Social Science
  • (until March 2009) Dr Mercedes Arguello Casteleiro, Research Associate, National Centre for e-Social Science

11. e-Infrastructure Service Providers

The following list comprises a selection of e-infrastructure service providers, related initiatives and projects with whom we are consulting:


Michael A. Fraser. Date:
Copyright University of Oxford.