On March 24, Frank Huband responded to Nam Suh169 concerning the probable decision by Bloch to transfer Communication Systems and Signal Processing programs (CSSP) to CISE. Huband was concerned that “important parts of the current CSSP program will not be relevant to the purposes of CISE and may thus not be eligible for future funding.” This memorandum was forwarded to Bloch and Bell, and Bell forwarded it to Chuck Brownstein, Bernie Chern (who had been reassigned from the Computer Engineering program to CISE), and me. Bell commented that “we will work it out over the next couple of months along with MOSIS funding, etc.”
Bell sent his initial plan170 for CISE to Bloch for approval via the Assistant Director for Administration on April 17, 1986. This memorandum proposed transferring the Division of Computer Research (DCR) from Mathematical and Physical Sciences, the Division of Information Science and Technology (DIST) from Biological and Behavioral Sciences, and the Office of Advanced Scientific Computing (OASC) from the Director’s Office intact. It proposed creating a new Division of Computer and Information Engineering (CIE) to temporarily house the computer engineering programs (Software Systems Design; Computer Systems Architecture; Vision, Robotic, and Knowledge-based Systems) and the Communications and Signal Processing programs, each from the Engineering Directorate. The proposal added a Division Director (Bernard Chern) for the new CIE Division, a CISE Planning Officer (Jerry Daen), an acting CISE Executive Officer (Charles Brownstein, who remained Director/DIST), and an acting senior scientist for planning and program development (W. Richards Adrion, who remained Deputy Director/DCR). The new directorate would have 54 positions, 49 permanent and 5 IPAs. Bloch approved, and the directorate was officially launched on May 1, 1986. At the time it was officially created, CISE had two advisory committees: Computer Research (mainly associated with DCR) and Advanced Scientific Computing (mainly associated with OASC).
In Bell’s presentation171 to the National Science Board in May, he described using the CISE research budget as a “balance wheel” to DARPA and industry. He defined five research areas: parallelism as applied to parallel processing; automation, robotics, and intelligent systems; ultra-large-scale integrated systems; advanced scientific and engineering computing; and networks and distributed computing. Bell focused on these areas because they had relatively clear, long-term goals; measurable output; an emphasis on maintaining U.S. leadership in computing; significant economic and competitive impact; and a demand for undergraduate and graduate training. Across these five initiatives, CISE would support basic, front-end research throughout the entire computer research community at a time when DARPA was becoming more “mission oriented.”
Between April and August, a number of organizational structures were considered. Bell’s five initiatives helped structure the divisional organization of CISE. While the initiatives were cross-cutting, divisions were thought of as the leads: DCR for parallelism as applied to parallel processing; DIST for automation, robotics, and intelligent systems; CIE for ultra-large-scale integrated systems; and OASC for advanced scientific and engineering computing. Bell did not see OASC leading networks and distributed computing, and that eventually led to a fifth division in CISE. DIST leadership in automation, robotics, and intelligent systems led to a proposed ARIS division that eventually became Information, Robotics, and Intelligent Systems (IRIS) due to a continuing commitment to information sciences and systems. Initially CIE was to become the Ultra-Large-Scale Integration (ULSIS) Division; but with a responsibility for computing design and architecture, it was renamed the Microelectronic Information Processing Systems (MIPS) Division. The need to locate the communication and signal processing programs led to DCR taking on that responsibility as the Computer and Communications Research (CCR) Division. One other proposed restructuring would have divided OASC172 into three sections: Centers with Larry Lee as Head; Networking and Distributed Computing with Steve Wolff as Head: and a New Technologies Section with Al Harvey as Head. The plan included research and EXPRES program directors. The tension over NSFNET as a national vs. supercomputer network continued and John Connolly strongly objected.
On August 26, 1986, Bell proposed173 restructuring CISE by reconfiguring the DCR, moving the Intelligent Systems program to DIST, renaming DCR as the Division of Computer and Computation Research, restructuring DIST and renaming it the Division of Information, Robotics, and Intelligent Systems, and restructuring CIE and naming it the Division of Microelectronic Information Processing Systems. The Office of Advanced Scientific Computing was renamed the Division of Advanced Scientific Computing. In the divisions, programs were restructured to reflect a new divisional mission. This plan was approved and became official174 on October 17, 1986.
This reorganization resulted in some personnel changes. Earlier in July, Chuck Brownstein officially was named CISE Executive Officer. (He had served briefly as Acting AD/CISE until Bell was sworn in on June 17, 1986.) While I would resign officially on September 14,175 remaining on a part-time basis through the fall, Gordon Bell already knew this when he wrote his August 26 memorandum. He officially transferred me into the position from DCR and argued to keep the position after my departure. Kent Curtis filled this position a year later. EXPRES was moved from DASC into the AD’s office. The last organizational change occurred on December 10, 1986, when the Networking and Communications programs in DASC became a fifth division in CISE: the Networking and Communications Research and Infrastructure Division (NCRI), with Steve Wolff as DD.
While the organizational debates were going on, the staff that were clearly moving to CISE began to address the planning process outlined by Bridgewater. I wrote176 in March 1986 to Chuck Brownstein, Bernie Chern, John Connolly, and Kent Curtis about long range planning for CISE, asking them to produce planning documents covering both existing programs and potential new initiatives. This was a three-part request: an exercise to “define the base,” long-range strategic planning, and issue papers on new initiatives. All of these were due March 17.
I wrote177 again to the (unofficial) CISE division directors about the need for them to develop plans to address the five Bell initiatives, asking for two-page position papers. Each acting division director needed to answer four questions Bloch had asked each directorate to address: What difference has NSF support made? What is the NSF role in [discipline] research? What are the programmatic gaps? What are your priorities in the event of reductions? Table 2.2 includes excerpts from the Long-Range Planning Material submitted to the Office of Budget, Audit, and Control178 in April 1986.
Each of five research initiatives included research opportunities/breakthroughs needed, current efforts, and plans and initiatives. Two-page position papers were written on (1) parallelism (lead: Rick Adrion); (2) advanced scientific computing (lead: John Connolly): (3) networking (lead: John Connolly); (4) fabrication facilities expanding the MOSIS concept (lead: Bernie Chern); (5) robotics (lead: Chuck Brownstein); and (6) experimental systems (lead; Robert Minnick).
In July, Chuck Brownstein asked179 the division directors to prepare backup materials for the FY 1988 budget request. CISE was requesting a $69.02 million increase to $192.00 million, a 56% increase over the FY 1987 current plan. Proposed initiatives included project and instrumentation support for research on parallel techniques of computing and information processing to be expanded throughout CISE; several large group or “mini-center” awards to be made to promote experimentation with large-scale systems; additional infrastructure for use throughout U.S. academic institutions, including upgrading instrumentation and improving laboratories; a major effort to be undertaken to expand university research and teaching in the design, fabrication, and use of integrated microelectronics; and a commitment to advancing and accelerating the state-of-the-art of advanced scientific computing.
More on the development of CISE is covered in the following chapters.
Table 2.2Answers to the “Four Questions” in the 1986 long-range planning exercise
What difference has NSF support made? |
CISE programs have improved the knowledge base for research and commerce and have developed the national scientific
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