The System Science (Sys) program funds fundamental research on engineered Systems that will support the creation of a mathematically sound framework for Systems engineering. The System Science program invites proposals that address fundamental Systems issues including System performance prediction, uncertainty quantification in the Systems context, theoretical foundations for aggregation in Systems, decision-making in the Systems context, and operation and maintenance in the Systems context. The System Science program does not fund development projects. Proposals that have System science or System engineering relevance, but for which the predominant research contribution is within an existing program in CMMI, should be submitted to the appropriate disciplinary program, with the System Science program identified as a secondary program.
The System Science (Sys) program funds fundamental research on engineered Systems that will support the creation of a mathematically sound framework for Systems engineering. The System Science program invites proposals that address fundamental Systems issues including System performance prediction, uncertainty quantification in the Systems context, theoretical foundations for aggregation in Systems, decision-making in the Systems context, and operation and maintenance in the Systems context. 28 28
The Systems Science (Sys) program supports fundamental research leading to a theoretical foundation for design and Systems engineering. In particular, the Systems Science program seeks intellectual advances in which underlying theories (such as probability theory, decision theory, game theory, organizational sociology, behavioral economics or cognitive psychology) are integrated and abstracted to develop explanatory models for design and Systems engineering in a general, domain-independent fashion. Ideally, the explanatory models, derived from the underlying theoretical foundations will lead to testable hypotheses. Based on collected evidence supporting or falsifying the hypotheses, new insights are gained allowing the explanatory models to be refined or updated.
The following programs have due dates that fall between October 1 - 25, 2013, and these dates are being revised due to the Federal
government shutdown. These revised dates apply whether the proposal is being submitted via the NSF FastLane System or
Grants.gov. Due to compressed proposal deadlines resulting from the shutdown, proposers are advised that they may experience a
delay when contacting IT Help Central with technical support questions. Frequently asked questions regarding these date changes
are available on the Resumption of Operations page on the NSF website at: http://www.nsf.gov/bfa/dias/policy/postshutdown.jsp.
The purpose of this FOA is to support a more efficient method for jurisdictions to de-duplicate the National HIV Surveillance System. The applicant will develop a privacy data-sharing tool capable of identifying potential duplicates across jurisdictions. Activities will include acquiring a Security Assessment and Authorization, negotiating with the 59 jurisdictions to obtain their participation, providing a data sharing tool that will allow for secure, encrypted submission and matching of person-level HIV surveillance data, and providing a report back to jurisdictions on matching levels.