Mar. 08, 2010
Source: Kansas State University
A Kansas State University professor is leading a group of scientists and computer researchers to help solve one of the greatest challenges in plant sciences — predicting how plants grow and develop based on their particular genetic makeup and the various environments they are found.
Solving this problem requires new computer software and computational capabilities, including powerful tools to allow scientists around the globe to collaborate on plant research.
The principles of iPlant, a nearly $50 million project funded by the National Science Foundation, include development of a cyberinfrastructure collaborative effort and also to train the next generation of scientists in computational thinking and to reinvent itself as the needs of the scientific community and technologies change, Welch said. The formal name of the five-year effort is the Plant Science Cyberinfrastructure Collaborative (PSCIC) program.



