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  • Community Organizations: Changing the Culture in Which Research Software Is Developed and Sustained

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    Weaver164937.pdf (291.5Kb)
    Author(s)
    Katz, Daniel S
    McInnes, Lois Curfman
    Bernholdt, David E
    Mayes, Abigail Cabunoc
    Hong, Neil P Chue
    Duckles, Jonah
    Gesing, Sandra
    Heroux, Michael A
    Hettrick, Simon
    Jimenez, Rafael C
    Pierce, Marlon
    Weaver, Belinda
    Wilkins-Diehr, Nancy
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Weaver, Belinda
    Year published
    2019
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Software is the key crosscutting technology that enables advances in mathematics, computer science, and domain-specific science and engineering to achieve robust simulations and analysis for science, engineering, and other research fields. However, software itself has not traditionally received focused attention from research communities; rather, software has evolved organically and inconsistently, with its development largely as by-products of other initiatives. Moreover, challenges in scientific software are expanding due to disruptive changes in computer hardware, increasing scale and complexity of data, and demands for ...
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    Software is the key crosscutting technology that enables advances in mathematics, computer science, and domain-specific science and engineering to achieve robust simulations and analysis for science, engineering, and other research fields. However, software itself has not traditionally received focused attention from research communities; rather, software has evolved organically and inconsistently, with its development largely as by-products of other initiatives. Moreover, challenges in scientific software are expanding due to disruptive changes in computer hardware, increasing scale and complexity of data, and demands for more complex simulations involving multiphysics, multiscale modeling and outer-loop analysis. In recent years, community members have established a range of grass-roots organizations and projects to address these growing technical and social challenges in software productivity, quality, reproducibility, and sustainability. This article provides an overview of such groups and discusses opportunities to leverage their synergistic activities while nurturing work toward emerging software ecosystems.
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    Journal Title
    COMPUTING IN SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
    Volume
    21
    Issue
    2
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1109/MCSE.2018.2883051
    Copyright Statement
    © 2019 COMPUTING IN SCIENCE & ENGINEERING. The attached file is is the author-manuscript version of this paper reproduced here in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal's website for access to the definitive, published version.
    Subject
    Numerical and computational mathematics
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/383226
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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