Seismological Research Letters; January 2008; v. 79; no. 1;
p. 5-6; DOI: 10.1785/gssrl.79.1.5
© 2008 Seismological Society of America
Is Bigger Really Better?
| The first 20% of the full text of this article appears below.
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I must receive at least 25 e-mails every day assuring me that size matters
greatly, and any opportunity to increase it, even of dubious medicinal nature,
should be immediately embraced. Well, is this true for science in general and
seismology in particular? There certainly seems to be an increasing tendency
for Big Science initiatives to take center stage, manifested both in federal
funding of consortia, interdisciplinary initiatives, and big equipment items
and the pre-eminence of multi-author research projects in major scientific
journals. As an active seismological researcher who tends to prefer
small-grant, single-investigator research, I look on these trends with mild
alarm. Yet, for the past three years I served as Chair of the Board of
Directors of the Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology (IRIS) and
as one of the six-member EarthScope Management Team, investing substantial
time and energy into the largest consortium funded by the National Science
Foundation (NSF) Division of Earth Sciences and the largest NSF major research
equipment (MRE) project in the earth sciences, respectively. Given my widely
shared concern that such Big Science activities intrinsically come at the
expense of Small Science research funding (my own bread and butter), how do we
each decide what endeavors to support with our time? Such choices confront all
researchers, and now that I am not on a plane every other week, I've been
giving it some more thought myself.
| If IRIS is Big Science for solid earth activities, then EarthScope is
even Bigger Science, with $200 million budgeted for facility construction
funding alone from 2003 to 2008 and ongoing annual operational and maintenance
costs exceeding $20 million per year.
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Clearly, not all Big Science activities are of the same nature. Some
involve large financial investments in unusually expensive
activities—activities beyond the scope of single-investigator
grants—that have very focused goals . . . [Full Text of this Article]
Thorne Lay
University of California, Santa
Cruz
thorne@pmc.ucsc.edu
Copyright © 2008 by Seismological Society of America