Use of accounting concepts to study research: Return on investment in XSEDE, a US cyberinfrastructure service

Stewart, C. A., Costa, C. M., Wernert, J. A., Snapp-Childs, W., Bland, M., et al. (2023). Use of accounting concepts to study research: Return on investment in XSEDE, a US cyberinfrastructure service. Scientometrics, doi:10.1007/s11192-022-04539-8

Title Use of accounting concepts to study research: Return on investment in XSEDE, a US cyberinfrastructure service
Author(s) Craig A. Stewart, Claudia M. Costa, Julie A. Wernert, Winona Snapp-Childs, Marques Bland, Philip Blood, Terry Campbell, Peter Couvares, Jeremy Fischer, David Y. Hancock, David L. Hart, Harmony Jankowski, Richard Knepper, Donald F. McMullen, Susan Mehringer, Marlon Pierce, Gary Rogers, Robert S. Sinkovits, John Towns
Abstract This paper uses accounting concepts-particularly the concept of Return on Investment (ROI)-to reveal the quantitative value of scientific research pertaining to a major US cyberinfrastructure project (XSEDE-the eXtreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment). XSEDE provides operational and support services for advanced information technology systems, cloud systems, and supercomputers supporting non-classified US research, with an average budget for XSEDE of US$20M+ per year over the period studied (2014-2021). To assess the financial effectiveness of these services, we calculated a proxy for ROI, and converted quantitative measures of XSEDE service delivery into financial values using costs for service from the US marketplace. We calculated two estimates of ROI: a Conservative Estimate, functioning as a lower bound and using publicly available data for a lower valuation of XSEDE services; and a Best Available Estimate, functioning as a more accurate estimate, but using some unpublished valuation data. Using the largest dataset assembled for analysis of ROI for a cyberinfrastructure project, we found a Conservative Estimate of ROI of 1.87, and a Best Available Estimate of ROI of 3.24. Through accounting methods, we show that XSEDE services offer excellent value to the US government, that the services offered uniquely by XSEDE (that is, not otherwise available for purchase) were the most valuable to the facilitation of US research activities, and that accounting-based concepts hold great value for understanding the mechanisms of scientific research generally.
Publication Title Scientometrics
Publication Date Feb 14, 2023
Publisher's Version of Record https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11192-022-04539-8
OpenSky Citable URL https://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7m049bf
OpenSky Listing View on OpenSky
CISL Affiliations CISLAODEPT

< Back to our listing of publications.