Infrastructure Engineering: A Still Missing, Undervalued Role in the Research Ecosystem
Vanessa Sochat

TL;DR
This paper emphasizes the critical need for a dedicated infrastructure engineering workforce in scientific research, highlighting how their absence hampers interoperability, reproducibility, and innovation in computational science.
Contribution
It identifies the missing role of infrastructure engineers in research ecosystems and argues for their importance in advancing scientific progress and infrastructure sustainability.
Findings
Lack of infrastructure engineers causes inefficiencies in research workflows.
Current workforce is insufficient to support evolving computational paradigms.
Supporting infrastructure engineers is essential for scientific reproducibility and innovation.
Abstract
Research has become increasingly reliant on software, serving as the driving force behind bioinformatics, high performance computing, physics, machine learning and artificial intelligence, to name a few. While substantial progress has been made in advocating for the research software engineer, a kind of software engineer that typically works directly on software and associated assets that go into research, little attention has been placed on the workforce behind research infrastructure and innovation, namely compilers and compatibility tool development, orchestration and scheduling infrastructure, developer environments, container technologies, and workflow managers. As economic incentives are moving toward different models of cloud computing and innovating is required to develop new paradigms that represent the best of both worlds, an effort called "converged computing," the need for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsConstruction Project Management and Performance
