TY - CONF T1 - Fostering e-Infrastructures: from user-designer relations to community engagement T2 - Symposium on Project Management in e-Science Y1 - 2008 A1 - Voss, A. A1 - Asgari-Targhi, M. A1 - Halfpenny, P. A1 - Procter, R. A1 - Anderson, S. A1 - Dunn, S. A1 - Fragkouli, E. A1 - Hughes, L. A1 - Atkinson, M. A1 - Fergusson, D. A1 - Mineter, M. A1 - Rodden, T. AB - In this paper we discuss how e-Science can draw on the findings, approaches and methods developed in other disciplines to foster e-Infrastructures for research. We also discuss the issue of making user involvement in IT development scale across an open ommunity of researchers and from single systems to distributed e-Infrastructures supporting collaborative research. JF - Symposium on Project Management in e-Science CY - Oxford ER - TY - CONF T1 - Widening Uptake of e-Infrastructure Services T2 - 4th International Conference on e-Social Science Y1 - 2008 A1 - Voss, A. A1 - Asgari-Targhi, M. A1 - Procter, R. A1 - Halfpenny, P. A1 - Dunn, S. A1 - Fragkouli, E. A1 - Anderson, S. A1 - Hughes, L. A1 - Mineter, M. A1 - Fergusson, D. A1 - Atkinson, M. AB - This paper presents findings from the e-Uptake project which aims to widen the uptake of e-Infrastructure Services for research. We focus specifically on the identification of barriers and enablers of uptake and the taxonomy developed to structure our findings. Based on these findings, we describe the development of a number of interventions such as training and outreach events, workshops and the deployment of a UK 'one-stop-shop' for support and event information as well as training material. Finally, we will describe how the project relates to other ongoing community engagement efforts in the UK and worldwide. Introduction Existing investments in e-Science and Grid computing technologies have helped to develop the capacity to build e-Infrastructures for research: distributed, networked, interoperable computing and data resources that are available to underpin a wide range of research activities in all research disciplines. In the UK, the Research Councils and the JISC are funding programmes to support the development of essential components of such infrastructures such as National Grid Service (www.ngs.ac.uk) or the UK Access Management Federation (www.ukfederation.org.uk) as well as discipline-specific efforts to build consistent and accessible instantiations of e-Infrastructures, for example the e- Infrastructure for the Social Sciences (Daw et al. 2007). These investments are complemented by an active programme of community engagement (Voss et al. 2007). As part of the community engagement strand of its e-Infrastructure programme, JISC has funded the e-Uptake project, a collaboration between the ESRC National Centre for e-Social Science at the University of Manchester, the Arts & Humanities e-Science Support Centre at King's College London and the National e-Science Centre at the University of Edinburgh. In this paper we present the project's activities to date to widen the uptake of e-Infrastructure services by eliciting information about the barriers to and enablers of uptake, developing adequate interventions such as training and outreach events, running workshops and the deploying a UK 'one-stop-shop' for support and event information as well as training material. JF - 4th International Conference on e-Social Science CY - Manchester UR - http://www.ncess.ac.uk/events/conference/programme/workshop1/?ref=/programme/thurs/1aVoss.htm ER - TY - CONF T1 - e-Research Infrastructure Development and Community Engagement T2 - All Hands Meeting 2007 Y1 - 2007 A1 - Voss, A. A1 - Mascord, M. A1 - Fraser, M. A1 - Jirotka, M. A1 - Procter, R. A1 - Halfpenny, P. A1 - Fergusson, D. A1 - Atkinson, M. A1 - Dunn, S. A1 - Blanke, T. A1 - Hughes, L. A1 - Anderson, S. AB - The UK and wider international e-Research initiatives are entering a critical phase in which they need to move from the development of the basic underlying technology, demonstrators, prototypes and early applications to wider adoption and the development of stable infrastructures. In this paper we will review existing work on studies of infrastructure and community development, requirements elicitation for existing services as well as work within the arts and humanities and the social sciences to establish e-Research in these communities. We then describe two projects recently funded by JISC to study barriers to adoption and responses to them as well as use cases and service usage models. JF - All Hands Meeting 2007 CY - Nottingham, UK ER -