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1 Overview of EPSRC Strategy The Future of HCI in the UK 14 th June 2007 Claire Hinchliffe
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2 ICT Programme - Contact Points Head of ICT Programme: John Hand Programme Managers: Computer Science Pamela Mason and Claire Hinchliffe Electronics Nicolas Guernion Photonics Christopher Jones Communications Nafeesa Simjee People and Interactivity Cora O’Reilly
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3 Total funding: £325.8m HCI: £17m
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4 Targetted Calls › WINES 3 – Call July 2007 › Bridging the Gaps 2 – Closing date 24/07/07 › Technology Enhanced Learning 2 – Closing date 12/07/07 › INTERACT 5 – Closing date 16/07/07
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5 Public Engagement › NOISE makers › Partnerships in Public Awareness › Public Communication Training Funds › Senior Media Fellows › Contact: Joanna Coleman (joanna.coleman@epsrc.ac.uk)
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6 EPSRC Overarching Vision “Our vision is for the UK to be the best place in the world in which to engage in research and innovation.”
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7 Aim (10 Year Framework) Making the UK the most attractive place for science and innovation Public Service Agreement (PSA) Target: improve the relative international performance of the UK research base … improve the overall innovation performance of the UK economy…. Output 1 A healthy UK science and engineering base Output 2 Better Exploitation “the science base is the absolute bedrock of our economic performance” Right Hon. Tony Blair, Prime Minister Science and Innovation Investment Framework 2004-2014
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8 EPSRC Strategic Plan 2006 Five Strategies 1.Partner relationship Management 2.Empowering and Incentivising 3.Research Careers 4.Grand Challenges 5.International Engagement
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9 Partner Relationship Management › Strategic partnerships › RDAs › TSB › Framework agreements › Other research councils
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10 Empowering and Incentivising › Critical mass Portfolio Partnerships Platform Grants IRCs › Collaborative Training Accounts › Integrated Knowledge Centres
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11 Initiating Research Careers › Fellowship Schemes › First Grants › Eng Docs › DTCs › CASE for New Academics
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12 Grand Challenges › Developing a shared vision › UKCRC grand challenges in computer science – bottom up approach › Societally led challenges › Industrially led challenges
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13 INTERNATIONAL ENGAGEMENT GoW Current on 08/12/2006 EU £159.2M United States £127.8M China £2.5M Australasia £13.9M India £4.0M Rest of World £7.3M Non EU Europe £18.3M Japan £25.1M South America £0.7M Canada £16.7M
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14 Key Knowledge Transfer Objectives › Increase KT from & to the research base › Increase engagement with key stakeholders › Raise visibility of embedded KT activities › Develop metrics to evaluate outputs and impacts
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15 Spending Review 2007 › Bilateral meetings with OSI › Small number of significantly sized areas › Cross-Council research priorities
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16 Delivery Plan Essential Platform for the Knowledge Economy and much of the Rest of Science Securing the Future Energy TowardsNextGenerationHealthCare TowardsBetterExploitation Digital Economy NanoScience through Engineering to application
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17 WHAT IS THE DIGITAL ECONOMY? › The transformational impact that ICT has on every single aspect of business activity. › It covers the whole range of processes, mechanisms and facilities that support and control economic and societal activities based on digital transactions.
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18 WHY DIGITAL ECONOMY NOW? › Advances from ICT and their utilisation are a major contributor to national economies and wealth › Early Adoption › ICT industry has changed: 20% of R&D is about new technology 80% is about applying it › Delivery of the Digital Economy is not just about computer science
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19 WHAT WILL WE DO? Pulling through the research challenges in these areas is the key element of the Digital Economy, we will: › Engage industrial sectors and other users › Establish strategic partnerships with key companies › Use partnerships to identify research challenges and build consortia › Establish multidisciplinary doctoral training
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20 HOW WILL IT BE MANAGED? › Advisory body › Cross Council Membership › Focussed Operational Group for each ‘targetted’ sector
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21 WHICH AREAS WILL IT COVER? › Promote activities to develop research strategy › We will focus on a small number of user driven areas (eg. Transport, Healthcare, Creative Industries, Finance and Services sector) › We will draw from and build on existing activities (eg.WINES, Future Intelligent Transport Systems, IRC activities)
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22 WHAT CAN THE COMMUNITY DO? › Feedback › Ideas › Contacts with user community › Contact: Cora O’Reilly (cora.oreilly@epsrc.ac.uk) John Hand (john.hand@epsrc.ac.uk)
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