NSF Designing Accountable Software Systems (DASS)
Posted December 1, 2021
Disciplines: Computer and Information Science and Engineering; Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences
The Designing Accountable Software Systems (DASS) program solicits foundational research aimed towards a deeper understanding and formalization of the bi-directional relationship between software systems and the complex social and legal contexts within which software systems must be designed and operate. The DASS program aims to bring researchers in computer and information science and engineering together with researchers in law and social, behavioral, and economic sciences to jointly develop rigorous and reproducible methodologies for understanding the drivers of social goals for software and for designing, implementing, and validating accountable software systems. DASS will support well-conceived collaborations between these two groups of researchers. The first group consists of researchers in software design, which, for the purposes of this solicitation, is broadly defined as formal methods, programming languages, software engineering, requirements engineering, and human-centered computing. The second group consists of researchers in law and the social, behavioral, and economic sciences, who study social systems and networks, culture, social norms and beliefs, rules, canons, precedents, legal code, and routine procedures that govern the conduct of people, organizations, and countries.
Projects are limited to $750,000 in total budget, with durations of up to three years.
Full proposals are due January 28, 2022.
To read the full funding opportunity, visit https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2022/nsf22512/nsf22512.htm