Facilitates collaborative AI research between the Department of Energy and National Science Foundation, focusing on machine learning, data analytics, and computational advancements. Requires interagency agreements and promotes data sharing, infrastructure support, and STEM education initiatives.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding federal statute enacted by the United States Congress with mandatory obligations on the Secretary of Energy and Director of the National Science Foundation, using mandatory language throughout and establishing legally enforceable requirements.
This document has minimal risk domain coverage, with only subdomain 6.4 (Competitive dynamics) receiving a coverage score of 2. The document primarily focuses on collaborative research coordination between federal agencies rather than addressing AI risks and harms. While it mentions AI and machine learning as research areas, it does not address the specific risks associated with these technologies.
This document primarily governs Scientific Research and Development Services and Public Administration (excluding National Security) sectors. It establishes collaborative research frameworks between federal agencies (DOE and NSF) and research institutions, with minimal direct governance of other economic sectors.
The document covers multiple AI lifecycle stages with primary focus on Plan and Design, Build and Use Model, and Operate and Monitor stages. It addresses collaborative research in AI/ML development, infrastructure support, and ongoing coordination activities.
The document explicitly mentions AI, machine learning, and various computational technologies as research focus areas. It does not define specific AI model types, compute thresholds, or distinguish between frontier, general purpose, or task-specific AI. The focus is on collaborative research and development rather than regulation of specific AI system types.
United States Congress; House of Representatives
The document is a federal bill (H.R. 2980) that was passed by the House of Representatives and received by the Senate, indicating Congress as the proposing body.
Committee on Science, Space, and Technology of the House of Representatives; Committee on Energy and Natural Resources; Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate
Congressional committees are designated to receive reports and provide oversight of the implementation of this Act, serving as the enforcement mechanism through congressional oversight.
Committee on Science, Space, and Technology of the House of Representatives; Committee on Energy and Natural Resources; Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate
The same congressional committees that enforce also monitor implementation through mandatory reporting requirements that detail interagency coordination, research achievements, and future opportunities.
Department of Energy; National Science Foundation; Federal agencies; National Laboratories; institutions of higher education; non-profit institutions
The Act applies to and regulates the activities of the Department of Energy and National Science Foundation, requiring them to carry out collaborative research activities. It also applies to other entities that may participate in the competitive process for research activities.