DocumentCode :
1933226
Title :
Demo III Collaborative workflows in earth science data mining
Author :
Lynnes, Chris ; Ramachandran, Rahul ; Conover, Helen ; Movva, Sunil ; Wilson, Brian
Author_Institution :
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland, USA
fYear :
2009
fDate :
18-22 May 2009
Abstract :
A small but growing number of scientists and researchers are beginning to harness Web 2.0 technologies as a transformative way of doing science. Since communication is at the heart of science, these technologies provide researchers easy mechanisms to share ideas, data and algorithms. These technologies complement formal means of sharing knowledge via conferences and published papers, where it is impossible to share all the research details, and where negative results are rarely included. Meanwhile, science software developers are converting data processing, analysis, mining and visualization algorithms into publicly available web services, allowing researchers access to large suites of algorithms for data processing and science analysis. This model of chaining services to create analysis workflows provides the research community unprecedented opportunity to collaborate, sharing their workflows, reproducing and analyzing research results, and leveraging colleagues´ expertise to expedite the process of scientific knowledge discovery. In many cases, the output of one workflow can be an input to others, leading to chained workflows with components shared by two or more researchers. A crucial component to foster this unprecedented cooperation within the research community is a reusable, extensible and customizable environment for building collaborative “open science” portals to manage these shared analysis workflows. Current collaborative portals are often one- time development efforts for specific science domains that cannot be easily extended beyond their initial features or reused by other science domains. As part of a current NASA project, we are developing “Talkoot” (Finnish analogue to a barn raising): a customizable “software appliance” to build collaborative portals for Earth Science services and analysis workflows. Talkoot will allow researchers (not just information technologists) to build collaborative sites aro- und service workflows within a few hours. Talkoot leverages Drupal, an open architecture Content Management System, as the framework for an online collaborative portal. Drupal also has a number of specialized modules developed by its user community to provide additional features. Talkoot adds Earth-science-specific modules to provide data searching, processing, analysis and mining capabilities. We will demonstrate the current prototype of Talkoot, which allows users to: create research experiments; select data sets; create data processing/analysis/mining workflows; execute these workflows on remote compute resources; and share both the results and the workflows with other users. Additional Talkoot features that are being developed or are planned will also be presented.
Keywords :
Algorithm design and analysis; Collaborative work; Data analysis; Data mining; Data processing; Geoscience; Heart; Paper technology; Portals; Software algorithms;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Collaborative Technologies and Systems, 2009. CTS '09. International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD, USA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4584-4
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4586-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CTS.2009.5067438
Filename :
5067438
Link To Document :
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