Her experience in international networking includes serving as principal investigator (PI) for the NSF-funded Networks for European, American, African, and Arctic Research (NEA3R) initiative, which connects scientists via two high-speed networks to Europe. She was also PI for the NSF-funded TransPAC5, which connects scientists in Asia and the U.S. via high speed networks.”The international work has now gone beyond just simple circuits to higher-level services. I’m hoping over the next few years to work with TACC’s contacts in Mexico and Central America to build a collaboration to address these needs,” Schopf said.

Prior to IU, Schopf was an NSF program officer who helped develop pragmatic networking solicitations, as well as supported several data and cyberinfrastructure solicitations. She was also part of the EarthCube program, and initiatives for international networks, distributed systems, and pragmatic software. In addition, she was a scientist in the mathematics and computer science division at Argonne National Laboratory.


Source: Jorge Salazar, TACC