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The e-Science Revolution: Transforming Multidisciplinary Research through Collaboration and Technology

Explore the implications of e-Science for the library community and the advancements in various scientific disciplines. Discover how remote computing resources, data analysis, and collaborative technologies are shaping the future of research.

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The e-Science Revolution: Transforming Multidisciplinary Research through Collaboration and Technology

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  1. Social Sciences Life Sciences e-Science and its Implications for the Library Community Earth Sciences Computer andInformation Sciences Tony Hey Corporate Vice President Technical Computing Microsoft Corporation New Materials,Technologiesand Processes MultidisciplinaryResearch

  2. Licklider’s Vision “Lick had this concept – all of the stuff linked together throughout the world, that you can use a remote computer, get data from a remote computer, or use lots of computers in your job” Larry Roberts – Principal Architect of the ARPANET

  3. Physics and the Web • Tim Berners-Lee developed the Web at CERN as a tool for exchanging information between the partners in physics collaborations • The first Web Site in the USA was a link to the SLAC library catalogue • It was the international particle physics community who first embraced the Web • ‘Killer’ application for the Internet • Transformed modern world – academia, business and leisure

  4. Beyond the Web? • Scientists developing collaboration technologies that go far beyond the capabilities of the Web • To use remote computing resources • To integrate, federate and analyse information from many disparate, distributed, data resources • To access and control remote experimental equipment • Capability to access, move, manipulate and mine data is the central requirement of these new collaborative science applications • Data held in file or database repositories • Data generated by accelerator or telescopes • Data gathered from mobile sensor networks

  5. What is e-Science? ‘e-Science is about global collaboration in key areas of science, and the next generation of infrastructure that will enable it’ John Taylor Director General of Research Councils UK, Office of Science and Technology

  6. The e-Science Vision • e-Science is about multidisciplinary science and the technologies to support such distributed, collaborative scientific research • Many areas of science are in danger of being overwhelmed by a ‘data deluge’ from new high-throughput devices, sensor networks, satellite surveys … • Areas such as bioinformatics, genomics, drug design, engineering, healthcare … require collaboration between different domain experts • ‘e-Science’ is a shorthand for a set of technologies to support collaborative networked science

  7. e-Science – Vision and Reality Vision • Oceanographic sensors - Project Neptune • Joint US-Canadian proposal Reality • Chemistry – The Comb-e-Chem Project • Annotation, Remote Facilities and e-Publishing

  8. http://www.neptune.washington.edu/

  9. Undersea Sensor Network Connected & Controllable Over the Internet

  10. Data Provenance

  11. Persistent Distributed Storage Visual Programming

  12. Distributed Computation Interoperability & Legacy Support via Web Services

  13. Searching & Visualization Live Documents Reputation & Influence

  14. Reproducible Research

  15. Collaboration

  16. Handwriting

  17. Interactive Data Dynamic Documents

  18. The Comb-e-Chem Project Automatic Annotation Video Data Stream HPC Simulation Data Mining and Analysis StructuresDatabase Diffractometer Combinatorial Chemistry Wet Lab National X-RayService Middleware

  19. National Crystallographic Service Send sample material to NCS service Collaborate in e-Lab experiment and obtain structure Search materials database and predict properties using Grid computations Download full data on materials of interest

  20. A digital lab book replacement that chemists were able to use, and liked

  21. Monitoring laboratory experiments using a broker delivered over GPRS on a PDA

  22. Crystallographic e-Prints Direct Access to Raw Data from scientific papers Raw data sets can be very large - stored at UK National Datastore using SRB software

  23. eBank Project Virtual Learning Environment Reprints Peer-Reviewed Journal & Conference Papers Technical Reports LocalWeb Preprints & Metadata Institutional Archive Publisher Holdings Certified Experimental Results & Analyses Data, Metadata & Ontologies Undergraduate Students Digital Library Graduate Students E-Scientists E-Scientists E-Scientists Grid 5 E-Experimentation Entire E-Science CycleEncompassing experimentation, analysis, publication, research, learning

  24. Support for e-Science • Cyberinfrastructure and e-Infrastructure • In the US, Europe and Asia there is a common vision for the ‘cyberinfrastructure’ required to support the e-Science revolution • Set of Middleware Services supported on top of high bandwidth academic research networks • Similar to vision of the Grid as a set of services that allows scientists – and industry – to routinely set up ‘Virtual Organizations’ for their research – or business • Many companies emphasize computing cycle aspect of Grids • The ‘Microsoft Grid’ vision is more about data management than about compute clusters

  25. Six Key Elements for a Global Cyberinfrastructure for e-Science • High bandwidth Research Networks • Internationally agreed AAA Infrastructure • Development Centers for Open Standard Grid Middleware • Technologies and standards for Data Provenance, Curation and Preservation • Open access to Data and Publications via Interoperable Repositories • Discovery Services and Collaborative Tools

  26. Company A (J2EE) Web Services Open Source (OMII) Company C (.Net) The Web Services ‘Magic Bullet’

  27. Real-world Data Persistent Distributed Data Workflow, Data Mining& Algorithms Interpretation & Insight ComputationalModeling

  28. Technical Computing in Microsoft • Radical Computing • Research in potential breakthrough technologies • Advanced Computing for Science and Engineering • Application of new algorithms, tools and technologies to scientific and engineering problems • High Performance Computing • Application of high performance clusters and database technologies to industrial applications

  29. New Science Paradigms • Thousand years ago: Experimental Science - description of natural phenomena • Last few hundred years: Theoretical Science - Newton’s Laws, Maxwell’s Equations … • Last few decades: Computational Science - simulation of complex phenomena • Today: e-Science or Data-centric Science - unify theory, experiment, and simulation - using data exploration and data mining • Data captured by instruments • Data generated by simulations • Processed by software • Scientist analyzes databases/files (With thanks to Jim Gray)

  30. TOOLS Workflow, Collaboration, Visualization, Data Mining DATA Acquisition, Storage, Annotation, Provenance, Curation, Preservation CONTENT Scholarly Communication, Institutional Repositories Advanced Computing for Science and Engineering Bioinformatics Energy Science Earth Science Engineering . . .

  31. Top 500 Supercomputer Trends Clusters over 50% Industry usage rising x86 is winning GigE is gaining

  32. Key Issues for e-Science • Workflows • The LEAD Project • The Data Chain • From Acquisition to Preservation • Scholarly Communication • Open Access to Data and Publications

  33. The LEAD Project Better predictions for Mesoscale weather

  34. The LEAD Vision DYNAMIC OBSERVATIONS • Product Generation, • Display, • Dissemination Prediction/Detection PCs to Teraflop Systems • Analysis/Assimilation • Quality Control • Retrieval of Unobserved • Quantities • Creation of Gridded Fields Models and Algorithms Driving Sensors The CS challenge: Build a virtual “eScience” laboratory to support experimentation and education leading to this vision. • End Users • NWS • Private Companies • Students

  35. Composing LEAD Services Need to construct workflows that are: • Data Driven • The weather input stream defines the nature of the computation • Persistent and Agile • An agent mines a data stream and notices an “interesting” feature. This event may trigger a workflow scenario that has been waiting for months • Adaptive • The weather changes • Workflow may have to change on-the-fly • Resources

  36. Example LEAD Workflow

  37. The e-Science Data Chain • Data Acquisition • Data Ingest • Metadata • Annotation • Provenance • Data Storage • Curation • Preservation

  38. The Data Deluge • In the next 5 years e-Science projects will produce more scientific data than has been collected in the whole of human history • Some normalizations: • The Bible = 5 Megabytes • Annual refereed papers = 1 Terabyte • Library of Congress = 20 Terabytes • Internet Archive (1996 – 2002) = 100 Terabytes • In many fields new high throughput devices, sensors and surveys will be producing Petabytes of scientific data

  39. Experiments & Instruments facts questions facts ? Other Archives facts answers Literature facts Simulations The Problem for the e-Scientist • Data ingest • Managing a petabyte • Common schema • How to organize it? • How to reorganize it? • How to coexist & cooperate with others? • Data Query and Visualization tools • Support/training • Performance • Execute queries in a minute • Batch (big) query scheduling

  40. Digital Curation? • In 20 years can guarantee that the operating system and spreadsheet program and the hardware used to store data will not exist • Need research ‘curation’ technologies such as workflow, provenance and preservation • Need to liaise closely with individual research communities, data archives and libraries • The UK has set up the ‘Digital Curation Centre’ in Edinburgh with Glasgow, UKOLN and CCLRC • Attempt to bring together skills of scientists, computer scientists and librarians

  41. Digital Curation Centre • Actions needed to maintain and utilise digital data and research results over entire life-cycle • For current and future generations of users • Digital Preservation • Long-run technological/legal accessibility and usability • Data curation in science • Maintenance of body of trusted data to represent current state of knowledge • Research in tools and technologies • Integration, annotation, provenance, metadata, security…..

  42. Berlin Declaration 2003 • ‘To promote the Internet as a functional instrument for a global scientific knowledge base and for human reflection’ • Defines open access contributions as including: • ‘original scientific research results, raw data and metadata, source materials, digital representations of pictorial and graphical materials and scholarly multimedia material’

  43. NSF ‘Atkins’ Report on Cyberinfrastructure • ‘the primary access to the latest findings in a growing number of fields is through the Web, then through classic preprints and conferences, and lastly through refereed archival papers’ • ‘archives containing hundreds or thousands of terabytes of data will be affordable and necessary for archiving scientific and engineering information’

  44. MIT DSpace Vision ‘Much of the material produced by faculty, such as datasets, experimental results and rich media data as well as more conventional document-based material (e.g. articles and reports) is housed on an individual’s hard drive or department Web server. Such material is often lost forever as faculty and departments change over time.’

  45. Publishing Data & Analysis Is Changing Roles Authors Publishers Curators Archives Consumers Traditional Scientists Journals Libraries Archives Scientists Emerging Collaborations Project web site Data+Doc Archives Digital Archives Scientists

  46. Data Publishing: The Background In some areas – notably biology – databases are replacing (paper) publications as a medium of communication • These databases are built and maintained with a great deal of human effort • They often do not contain source experimental data - sometimes just annotation/metadata • They borrow extensively from, and refer to, other databases • You are now judged by your databases as well as your (paper) publications • Upwards of 1000 (public databases) in genetics

  47. Data Publishing: The issues • Data integration • Tying together data from various sources • Annotation • Adding comments/observations to existing data • Becoming a new form of communication • Provenance • ‘Where did this data come from?’ • Exporting/publishing in agreed formats • To other programs as well as people • Security • Specifying/enforcing read/write access to parts of your data

  48. Interoperable Repositories? • Paul Ginsparg’s arXiv at Cornell has demonstrated new model of scientific publishing • Electronic version of ‘preprints’ hosted on the Web • David Lipman of the NIH National Library of Medicine has developed PubMedCentral as repository for NIH funded research papers • Microsoft funded development of ‘portable PMC’ now being deployed in UK and other countries • Stevan Harnad’s ‘self-archiving’ EPrints project in Southampton provides a basis for OAI-compliant ‘Institutional Repositories’ • Many national initiatives around the world moving towards mandating deposition of ‘full text’ of publicly funded research papers in repositories

  49. Microsoft Strategy for e-Science Microsoft intends to work with the scientific and library communities: • to define open standard and/or interoperable high-level services, work flows and tools • to assist the community in developing open scholarly communication and interoperable repositories

  50. Acknowledgements With special thanks to Kelvin Droegemeier, Geoffrey Fox, Jeremy Frey, Dennis Gannon, Jim Gray, Yike Guo, Liz Lyon and Beth Plale

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