1 / 1

S.J.S. Khalsa, M. Parsons, R. Duerr, J. Pearlman, F. Pearlman, S. Browdy, S. Nativi

ESIP Summer Meeting 2012, Madison, WI. Web 2.0 Resources. Brokering as a Core Element of EarthCube ’ s Cyberinfrastructure. EarthCube Geoscience Resources. NSF EarthCube Concept Award. S.J.S. Khalsa, M. Parsons, R. Duerr, J. Pearlman, F. Pearlman, S. Browdy, S. Nativi. Semantic engines.

clea
Download Presentation

S.J.S. Khalsa, M. Parsons, R. Duerr, J. Pearlman, F. Pearlman, S. Browdy, S. Nativi

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ESIP Summer Meeting 2012, Madison, WI Web 2.0Resources Brokering as a Core Element of EarthCube’s Cyberinfrastructure EarthCube Geoscience Resources NSF EarthCube Concept Award S.J.S. Khalsa, M. Parsons, R. Duerr, J. Pearlman, F. Pearlman, S. Browdy, S. Nativi Semantic engines Thesauri/ Gazetteers Overview J&F E Options for Providing Integrated Access to Community Resources We are studying a candidate technology for the EarthCube Cyberinfrastruture called brokering. In a generic sense a broker is an intermediary sitting between a client application and one or more resources. A broker can also interact with multiple clients on behalf of a single resource. What this Concept Award is exploring is a Brokering Framework that serves as an integrating element for many resources, enabling the utilization of these resources by different communities using the protocols, metadata standards, semantics and data formatting that are familiar to that community. Disciplines, consortia, project teams (Communities of Practice or CoP) establish a “service bus” consisting of community catalogs, data models, semantics, etc. that connects users with providers of services (data, processing, visualization, etc.) within the context of that community. Users in other communities must use the mechanisms of each separate community to find and access the data of those communities. The Brokering approach Definition of Brokering • Brokers are middleware interconnecting client and server components in the EarthCube cyber-infrastructure. • Brokers are services facilitating the run-time interconnection (sharing of resources) among users and providers in a way that requires little effort on the part of either. • A Brokering Framework is an infrastructure service maintained by a third party for the benefit of diverse community of stakeholders. • A Brokering Framework may include discovery, semantic enhancement and natural language, data access, processing and publishing services. A provider wishing to make their data available to different communities must configure their server to “speak the language” of the clients in all those communities. Likewise, a CoP Service Bus would have to be so configured for each community. Furthermore, each provider, or CoP, would have to go through the same effort. Brokering Framework (tier) Project Status Data Provider Resources (tier) • Vetted brokering definition with community • Performing broker evaluations (hack-a-thons) • Collaborating with other EarthCube Teams on applications of brokering in their environments • Working with international science partners on brokering use cases • Drafted Brokering Roadmap for discussion at the EarthCube Charrette • Contributing to dialog on infrastructure development options and related schedules User Applications/portals (tier) Web 2.0 Broker Publish Broker Discovery Broker We believe the EarthCube cyberinfrastructure should include a brokering component that removes the burdens of enabling interoperability from providers and users. Advantages of Brokering Access Broker • Lowers barriers to participation in distributed systems for both users and resource providers (minimal burden or cost impact on existing systems) • Accelerates interconnection of disparate systems • Facilitates sustainability, reusability, extensibility, and flexibility of the infrastructure • Enhances multi-disciplinary interoperability via introduction of new capabilities across multiple domains • Removes need to impose common (e.g. federal, “top-down”) specifications and software components enabling a more adaptive “bottom-up” evolution of the infrastructure. Semantic Broker

More Related