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Summary of Conclusions
The Information Technology Laboratory of the National Institute of Standards
and Technology is a well-managed science and engineering facility contributing in
important ways to the nation’s scientific and technical research and development needs.
The ITL supports the NIST mission through its own mission “to promote U.S. innovation
and industrial competitiveness by advancing measurement science, standards, and
technology through research and development in information technology, mathematics,
and statistics”33
To support its mission, the ITL has focused its R&D agenda on eight broad
program areas: complex systems; cyber and network security; the enabling of scientific
discovery; identity-management systems; information discovery, use, and sharing;
pervasive information technologies; trustworthy information systems; and virtual
measurement systems. Through programs in these areas, the ITL works to support
important national programs and mandates. Examples among many of these mandates
include the following: the USA PATRIOT Act and the Enhanced Border Security and
Visa Entry Reform Act of 2002, the Help America Vote Act of 2002, and the Health
Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act of 2009.
Each of the six divisions comprising the ITL is well managed, staffed with highly
capable researchers, and addressing problems of national and international interests. For
example, the ITL supports the National Initiative for Cybersecurity Education, working
to build a framework to promulgate education, training, and awareness of cybersecurity
issues to every segment of the population.
The recommendations in this report are designed to address problems that exist in
the ITL. These problems include the need to increase staffing in order to continue to
support ITL’s mission; the need to find a new permanent, full-time chief of one division;
and the need to sort out the vision in the Software and Systems Division.
In summary, NIST in general and the Information Technology Laboratory in
particular are exciting places to work. The work is challenging, interesting, and clearly
of importance to industry and to the commerce of the nation.
33
Cita M. Furlani, ITL Director, “The Information Technology Laboratory,” presentation to the
panel, Gaithersburg, Maryland, March 21, 2011, p. 3.
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