Subhashini Sivagnanam, a software architect and developer of the Neuroscience Gateway (NSG), has reportedly received $818,433 from the US National Science Foundation (NSF), in order to help fund the development of the Open Science Chain (OSC) project.
According to the award letter, the research funding will start on September 1st, 2018 and will continue until August 31st, 2021.
The NSF website noted that the OSC will be implemented using distributed ledger technology (DLT) and will allow researchers to work efficiently with data obtained from various scientific experiments and lab studies.
Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT) For Scientific Data
Public records state that the OSC project will aim to create
“a web-based cyberinfrastructure platform built using distributed ledger technologies that allows researchers to provide metadata and verification information about their scientific datasets and update this information as the datasets change and evolve over time in an auditable manner.”
Notably, the NSF is one of the world’s leading scientific research centers and has helped launch several US government-backed projects and studies. In July 2017, a researcher at Princeton University received over $400,000 from the US government to help fund his study on the application of mechanism incentives to blockchain-based digital currencies.
Improving Cyber-Infrastrucure
Earlier in January, 2017, the NSF announced its plans to help fund projects related to exploring the use of blockchain technology in improving cyber-infrastructure. The foundation had been looking to fund up to nine different projects, with each project receiving approximately $1 million from the federal government.
In its March, 2017 program solicitation called Cybersecurity Innovation for Cyberinfrastructure, the NSF noted,
“With the growing amount of remote instruments and the increasing amount of data being collected from multiple, often remote, wireless and mobile sensors, science is increasingly distributed and virtual. Solutions such as the introduction of blockchain technology are needed to ensure the integrity and confidentiality of data as it traverses multiple environments such as mobile, cloud, campus, and Internet networks.”
In 2015, the research foundation had awarded about $3 million in funding for a cryptocurrency-related research study carried out by a group of scientists from University of California Berkeley, Cornell University and the University of Maryland.