Next Generational Financial Cyberinfrastucture Workshop

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Overview

The Great Recession of 2008 and the continuing reverberations in the Eurozone have highlighted 
significant limitations in the ability of regulators and analysts/researchers to monitor and 
model the national and global financial ecosystem. This includes the lack of financial 
cyberinfrastructure to ingest and process numerous streams of financial transactions, as well as 
the accompanying data streams of economic activity, in real time. Also absent are open standards
and shared semantics so that this data can be used to populate models of individual markets, 
financial networks and the interconnected ecosystem representing the global financial system. 
The most important challenge is the need to develop computational research frameworks, models 
and methods, in the spirit of past efforts to identify computational grand challenges in a diversity 
of data intensive domains including the biomedical sciences, health information management, 
climate change, etc. The next generation of financial cyberinfrastructure must provide a platform 
that can transform our current approaches to monitoring and regulating systemic risk. 

Organized under the auspices of the University of Maryland's Center for Financial Policy, 
the goal of this workshop (and related activities) is to work closely with federal regulatory 
agencies, academic research communities in computer science, finance, economics and 
other related disciplines, the financial industry and the computing industry. 
The broader impact will include the following:  
* A blueprint for the next generation financial cyberinfrastructure. 
* A computational research framework with models and methods that are needed to transform 
  the monitoring and regulation of systemic risk.
* Best practices for the software industry and a robust regulatory framework.
* Multi-disciplinary Ph.D. level curriculum and doctoral dissertation challenges.

Workshop Sponsor

National Science Foundation, Division of Information & Intelligent Systems

Organizers

Organizers
* Louiqa Raschid, Professor, University of Maryland
* H. V. Jagadish, Bernard A Galler Professor, University of Michigan
* Michelle Lui, Assistant Director, Center for Financial Policy, University of Maryland
Advisory Committee and/or Report Writing Committee sponsored by the Computing Research Association / Computing Community Consortium [1]
* Mike Bennett, EDM Council
* Phil Bernstein, Microsoft
* Andrea Cali, Oxford Man Institute of Quantitative Finance and University of London
* Benjamin Grosof
* A. “Pete” Kyle, Charles E. Smith Chair in Finance, University of Maryland
* Joe Langsam, Committee to Establish the NIF; formerly of Morgan Stanley
* Leora Morgenstern, Technical Fellow and Senior Scientist, SAIC
* David Newman, Vice President for Enterprise Architecture, Wells Fargo
* Frank Olken
* Rachel Pottinger, University of British Columbia
* Chester Spatt, Pamela R. and Kenneth B. Dunn Professor of Finance, Carnegie Mellon University
* Lemma Senbet, William E. Mayer Chair in Finance and Director, Center for Financial Policy, University of Maryland
* Nancy Wallace, Professor, University of California
* Michael Wellman, University of Michigan

Participants

For a list of participants click here

Background Reading

For a list of articles click here

Agenda

For the agenda click here

Research Challenges

For the challenges click here

Logistics

When and Where

July 19-20, 2012

9am-5pm

Waterview Conference Center

1919 North Lynn Street

Arlington, VA 22209

24th Floor

For more information regarding workshop location, accommodations, and travel, click here

Sloan Foundation Call for Proposals Related to LEI

The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation [2]

Outputs

CRA CCC Blog

Media:Draft_Report.pdf

ISWC 2012 Tutorial

For details about the tutorial click here

Karsha Document Annotation and Semantic Search (DASS)

click here

CRI CI-P Proposal

click here