NASA Tournament Lab to Launch Big Data Challenge Series for U.S. Government Agencies

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Oct. 03, 2012

Joshua Buck 
Headquarters, Washington      
202-358-1100 
jbuck@xxxxxxxx 

Lisa-Joy Zgorski 
National Science Foundation 
703-292-8311 
lisajoy@xxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 12-346

NASA TOURNAMENT LAB TO LAUNCH BIG DATA CHALLENGE SERIES FOR U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES

WASHINGTON -- NASA, the National Science Foundation and the Department 
of Energy's Office of Science announced on Wednesday the launch of 
the Big Data Challenge, a series of competitions hosted through the 
NASA Tournament Lab (NTL). 

The Big Data Challenge series will apply the process of open 
innovation to conceptualizing new and novel approaches to using "big 
data" information sets from various U.S. government agencies. This 
data comes from the fields of health, energy and Earth science. 
Competitors will be tasked with imagining analytical techniques and 
software tools that use big data from discrete government information 
domains. They will need to describe how the data may be shared as 
universal, cross-agency solutions that transcend the limitations of 
individual agencies. 

"The ability to create new applications and algorithms using diverse 
data sets is a key element for the NTL," said Jason Crusan, director 
of the Advanced Exploration Systems Division at NASA Headquarters in 
Washington. "NASA is excited to see the results that open innovation 
can provide to these big data applications." 

"Big Data is characterized not only by the enormous volume or the 
velocity of its generation but also by the heterogeneity, diversity 
and complexity of the data," said Suzi Iacono, co-chair of the 
interagency Big Data Senior Steering Group, a part of the Networking 
and Information Technology Research and Development Program. "There 
are enormous opportunities to extract knowledge from these 
large-scale diverse data sets, and to provide powerful new approaches 
to drive discovery and decision-making, and to make increasingly 
accurate predictions. We're excited to see what this competition will 
yield." 

The competition will be run by the NTL, a collaboration between NASA, 
Harvard University and TopCoder, a competitive community of digital 
creators. The TopCoder Open Innovation platform and process allows 
U.S. government agencies to conduct high risk/high reward challenges 
in an open and transparent environment with predictable cost, 
measurable outcomes-based results and the potential to move quickly 
into unanticipated directions and new areas of software technology. 
Registration is open through Oct. 13 for the Ideation Challenge 
phase, the first of four idea generation competitions in the series. 

For full competition details and registration, visit: 

http://community.topcoder.com/coeci/nitrd/ 

	
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