ARKANSAS: Arkansas receives new NSF EPSCoR RII Track-1 project, DART
July 1, 2020 marked the first day of a five-year statewide collaborative research project, “Data Analytics that are Robust and Trusted: From Smart Curation to Socially Aware Decision Making” (DART). This project will investigate key aspects of three barriers to practical application and acceptance of modern data analytics. Those three barriers are the management of big data, the security or privacy of big data, and interpretability of the models used to understand big data.
This project was funded by the National Science Foundation Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (NSF EPSCoR) at $20M and included a $4M cash match from the State. The goal of the NSF EPSCoR program is to build research infrastructure and competitiveness among states that receive a small overall percentage of NSF grants. EPSCoR was created in 1979 at NSF and expanded over the following years to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Department of Defense (DOD), Department of Agriculture (USDA), National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and the Department of Energy (DOE).
Arkansas has successfully competed for NSF EPSCoR Track-1 grants for decades. These grants have purchased major equipment and instruments (like a 3d printer that prints at nanoscale), dramatically improved the state’s cyberinfrastructure, and supported hundreds of scientific researchers who in turn have published hundreds of scientific papers and secured millions more in research funding.
DART will address the looming gap in the number of data science jobs and data science-skilled workers in the country. According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Computer and Information Research Science as a career field is projected to grow 15% through 2029. Data scientist is one of the fastest growing careers in the country, projected to grow 31% by 2029. Companies of all sizes and in all sectors are looking to big data to solve a variety of problems, and DART is in position to help.