Making Data Sharing Happen - 0 views
Study finds many authors aren't sharing data when they publish - and leads to a PLOS ON... - 0 views
The Kepler Project - Kepler - 0 views
-
The Kepler Project is dedicated to furthering and supporting the capabilities, use, and awareness of the free and open source, scientific workflow application, Kepler. Kepler is designed to help scientists, analysts, and computer programmers create, execute, and share models and analyses across a broad range of scientific and engineering disciplines. Kepler can operate on data stored in a variety of formats, locally and over the internet, and is an effective environment for integrating disparate software components, such as merging "R" scripts with compiled "C" code, or facilitating remote, distributed execution of models. Using Kepler's graphical user interface, users simply select and then connect pertinent analytical components and data sources to create a "scientific workflow"-an executable representation of the steps required to generate results. The Kepler software helps users share and reuse data, workflows, and components developed by the scientific community to address common needs.
About « The Open Dinosaur Project - 0 views
-
The Open Dinosaur Project was founded to involve scientists and the public alike in developing a comprehensive database of dinosaur limb bone measurements, to investigate questions of dinosaur function and evolution. We have three major goals:1) do good science; 2) do this science in the most open way possible; and 3) allow anyone who is interested to participate. And by anyone, we mean anyone! We do not care about your education, geographic location, age, or previous background with paleontology. The only requirement for joining us is that you share the goals of our project and are willing to help out in the efforts.
TEXTUS - 0 views
-
What is TEXTUS? In a nutshell it is an open source platform for working with collections of texts. It harnesses the power of semantic web technologies and delivers them in a simple and intuitive interface so that students, researchers and teachers can share and collaborate around collections of texts. TEXTUS is a project of the Open Knowledge Foundation.
SciVee | Making Science Visible - 0 views
The Third Reviewer - 0 views
Figsgare - 0 views
-
Figshare allows researchers to publish all of their research outputs in seconds in an easily citable, sharable and discoverable manner. All file formats can be published, including videos and datasets that are often demoted to the supplemental materials section in current publishing models. By opening up the peer review process, researchers can easily publish null results, avoiding the file drawer effect and helping to make scientific research more efficient. Figshare uses creative commons licensing to allow frictionless sharing of research data whilst allowing users to maintain their ownership.
The Open Dinosaur Project - 0 views
-
The Open Dinosaur Project was founded to involve scientists and the public alike in developing a comprehensive database of dinosaur limb bone measurements, to investigate questions of dinosaur function and evolution. We have three major goals:1) do good science; 2) do this science in the most open way possible; and 3) allow anyone who is interested to participate. And by anyone, we mean anyone! We do not care about your education, geographic location, age, or previous background with paleontology. The only requirement for joining us is that you share the goals of our project and are willing to help out in the efforts.
IEEE Xplore - Abstract Page - 0 views
-
Complex coupled multi-physics simulations are playing increasingly important roles in scientific and engineering applications such as fusion plasma and climate modeling. At the same time, extreme scales, high levels of concurrency and the advent of multicore and many core technologies are making the high-end parallel computing systems on which these simulations run, hard to program. While the Partitioned Global Address Space (PGAS) languages is attempting to address the problem, the PGAS model does not easily support the coupling of multiple application codes, which is necessary for the coupled multi-physics simulations. Furthermore, existing frameworks that support coupled simulations have been developed for fragmented programming models such as message passing, and are conceptually mismatched with the shared memory address space abstraction in the PGAS programming model. This paper explores how multi-physics coupled simulations can be supported within the PGAS programming framework. Specifically, in this paper, we present the design and implementation of the XpressSpace programming system, which enables efficient and productive development of coupled simulations across multiple independent PGAS Unified Parallel C (UPC) executables. XpressSpace provides the global-view style programming interface that is consistent with the memory model in UPC, and provides an efficient runtime system that can dynamically capture the data decomposition of global-view arrays and enable fast exchange of parallel data structures between coupled codes. In addition, XpressSpace provides the flexibility to define the coupling process in specification file that is independent of the program source codes. We evaluate the performance and scalability of Xpress Space prototype implementation using different coupling patterns extracted from real world multi-physics simulation scenarios, on the Jaguar Cray XT5 system of Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
EarthCube - 0 views
-
The goal of EarthCube is to transform the conduct of research by supporting the development of community-guided cyberinfrastructure to integrate data and information for knowledge management across the Geosciences. This website has been set up to foster community collaboration, and will provide updated information, resource documents, and discussion forums so that community groups, consortia, researchers, and educators can share ideas, introduce concepts, and find and develop collaborative efforts.
CIP TCGA Radiology Initiative - The Cancer Imaging Archive - Cancer Imaging Archive Wiki - 0 views
-
Driven by input from its scientific community, the Cancer Imaging Program (CIP) finds itself at the junction of two powerful scientific requisites; the need for cross-disciplinary research and inter-institutional data-sharing to speed scientific discovery and reduce redundancy, and the need to provide imaging phenotype data to augment large scale genomic analysis.
The Human Connectome Project - 0 views
-
The NIH Human Connectome Project is an ambitious effort to map the neural pathways that underlie human brain function. The overarching purpose of the Project is to acquire and share data about the structural and functional connectivity of the human brain. It will greatly advance the capabilities for imaging and analyzing brain connections, resulting in improved sensitivity, resolution, and utility, thereby accelerating progress in the emerging field of human connectomics. Altogether, the Human Connectome Project will lead to major advances in our understanding of what makes us uniquely human and will set the stage for future studies of abnormal brain circuits in many neurological and psychiatric disorders.
Spreading Science Knowledge Far and Wide | The New York Academy of Sciences - 0 views
-
By: Adrienne J. Burke | posted April 16, 2010 Surely you've noticed: The scientific community is undergoing a research-and-data-sharing sea change. Perhaps slower to take to Web-based dissemination than some professions, science-the endeavor for which the World Wide Web was developed-has gradually been adopting new online methods for distributing knowledge.
Study on Impact Of Journal Data Policies - 0 views
-
Policies that request and require investigators to share research data are becoming more common. This research study, The impact of public data archiving policies on attitudes, experiences, and practices of authors, explores the impact of journal policies on the experiences, attitudes, and practices of active scientists.
Special Track Research 2.0 (#STR20) | i-KNOW 2012 - 1 views
-
Research 2.0 deals with the involvement of the web in science. It spans from the utilization of Web 2.0 tools and technologies in research to a more open and sharing approach to science. Some definitions of Research 2.0 even include notions of a methodological change due to the abundance of data, and the nature of the socio-technical systems on the web.
Can you recommend (empirical) studies on the data sharing behaviour of (academic) resea... - 0 views
1 - 19 of 19
Showing 20▼ items per page