Progress in earth and space science infrastructure: grids, frameworks and semantics

From Semantic Portal Wiki

Jump to: navigation, search

{{#vardefine:category|Publication}}{{#vardefine:templatename|i.publication}}{{#vardefine:package|smwbp_instance_templates}}

Edit
{{#vardefine:authoreditor|Don Middleton, Deborah L. McGuinness, Peter Fox, Jose Garcia, Luca Cinquini, Patrick West}}

Reference: {{#vardefine:pagename|progress in earth and space science infrastructure: grids, frameworks and semantics }}

  1. [[]]

bibtex

{{#vardefine:pagename|Progress in earth and space science infrastructure: grids, frameworks and semantics }}{{#vardefine:key| }}

abstract: We report on the very substantial progress made in several medium size cyberinfrastructure projects that involve multiple institutions and diverse provider and user communities. Of particular note is the degree to which we have implemented robust production application frameworks built upon what up until a few years ago was considered experimental technologies in the fields of Earth and space sciences. These include Grid technologies, advanced software frameworks and semantic web technologies. We present our methods and successes across projects such as the Earth System Grid, the Virtual Solar-Terrestrial Observatory, and others. One trend that is emerging is a growing community of researchers who are recognizing a need for significant foundational resources such as geo-science ontologies, ontology languages and related environments for generation, evolution, maintenance, diagnosis, explanation, and verification, and crossinstitutional services for single sign-on, resource and service integration and interconnection. While there is a long way to go to get to the point of a set of standard reference ontologies and supporting infrastructure, significant progress has been made.These projects are supported by NCAR, DoE, NASA, and NSF.

download:

Facts about Progress in earth and space science infrastructure: grids, frameworks and semanticsRDF feed
AbstractWe report on the very substantial progress We report on the very substantial progress made in several medium size cyberinfrastructure projects that involve multiple institutions and diverse provider and user communities. Of particular note is the degree to which we have implemented robust production application frameworks built upon what up until a few years ago was considered experimental technologies in the fields of Earth and space sciences. These include Grid technologies, advanced software frameworks and semantic web technologies. We present our methods and successes across projects such as the Earth System Grid, the Virtual Solar-Terrestrial Observatory, and others. One trend that is emerging is a growing community of researchers who are recognizing a need for significant foundational resources such as geo-science ontologies, ontology languages and related environments for generation, evolution, maintenance, diagnosis, explanation, and verification, and crossinstitutional services for single sign-on, resource and service integration and interconnection. While there is a long way to go to get to the point of a set of standard reference ontologies and supporting infrastructure, significant progress has been made.These projects are supported by NCAR, DoE, NASA, and NSF. are supported by NCAR, DoE, NASA, and NSF.
AddressDenver, CO.  +
AuthorDon Middleton  +, Deborah L. McGuinness  +, Peter Fox  +, Jose Garcia  +, Luca Cinquini  +, and Patrick West  +
Bibtypeinproceedings  +
BooktitleProceedings of the Electronic Geophysical Year, Virtual Observatories in Geosciences (VOIG)  +
Key2007progress  +
MonthJune  +
Paper urlhttp://vsto.hao.ucar.edu/voig_conference/VOiG_abstracts.pdf  +
TagNatural Science  +
TitleProgress in Earth and Space Science Infrastructure: Grids, Frameworks and Semantics  +
Year2007  +
Personal tools
Semantic Web Community
Tetherless World constellation
maintenance