184,139 research outputs found

    Distributed Object Medical Imaging Model

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    Abstract- Digital medical informatics and images are commonly used in hospitals today,. Because of the interrelatedness of the radiology department and other departments, especially the intensive care unit and emergency department, the transmission and sharing of medical images has become a critical issue. Our research group has developed a Java-based Distributed Object Medical Imaging Model(DOMIM) to facilitate the rapid development and deployment of medical imaging applications in a distributed environment that can be shared and used by related departments and mobile physiciansDOMIM is a unique suite of multimedia telemedicine applications developed for the use by medical related organizations. The applications support realtime patients’ data, image files, audio and video diagnosis annotation exchanges. The DOMIM enables joint collaboration between radiologists and physicians while they are at distant geographical locations. The DOMIM environment consists of heterogeneous, autonomous, and legacy resources. The Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA), Java Database Connectivity (JDBC), and Java language provide the capability to combine the DOMIM resources into an integrated, interoperable, and scalable system. The underneath technology, including IDL ORB, Event Service, IIOP JDBC/ODBC, legacy system wrapping and Java implementation are explored. This paper explores a distributed collaborative CORBA/JDBC based framework that will enhance medical information management requirements and development. It encompasses a new paradigm for the delivery of health services that requires process reengineering, cultural changes, as well as organizational changes

    The Open Archives Initiative Object Reuse and Exchange (OAI-ORE)

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    The Open Archives Initiative Object Reuse and Exchange (OAI-ORE) is a new collaborative international initiative, funded for the next 2 years by the Mellon Foundation, focusing on an interoperability framework for the exchange of information about Digital Objects between cooperating repositories, registries and services. The initiative's web site is available at http://openarchives.org/ore. A primary aim of the OAI-ORE is to support the creation, management and dissemination of the new forms of composite digital resources being produced by eResearch and eScholarship (i.e., multi-part, multi-media, distributed and service-oriented rather than single file-based objects). As more scientific communities begin to publish their raw data sets, experimental details, analytical methods and visualisations, in addition to the traditional scholarly publications - the problem of describing such compound objects for exchange and re-use will become critical. It is the aim of OAI-ORE to extend the work of OAI-PMH to support the metadata requirements for the exchange and re-use of such complex resources. This paper will present an overview of the OAI-ORE, its aims and objectives, workplan and current and anticipated deliverables. It will also demonstrate the applicability of OAI-ORE to eResearch through a number of case studies that involve the generation, analysis, re-use and exchange of compound digital objects within scientific disciplines

    Pathways: Augmenting interoperability across scholarly repositories

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    In the emerging eScience environment, repositories of papers, datasets, software, etc., should be the foundation of a global and natively-digital scholarly communications system. The current infrastructure falls far short of this goal. Cross-repository interoperability must be augmented to support the many workflows and value-chains involved in scholarly communication. This will not be achieved through the promotion of single repository architecture or content representation, but instead requires an interoperability framework to connect the many heterogeneous systems that will exist. We present a simple data model and service architecture that augments repository interoperability to enable scholarly value-chains to be implemented. We describe an experiment that demonstrates how the proposed infrastructure can be deployed to implement the workflow involved in the creation of an overlay journal over several different repository systems (Fedora, aDORe, DSpace and arXiv).Comment: 18 pages. Accepted for International Journal on Digital Libraries special issue on Digital Libraries and eScienc

    Digital Preservation Services : State of the Art Analysis

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    Research report funded by the DC-NET project.An overview of the state of the art in service provision for digital preservation and curation. Its focus is on the areas where bridging the gaps is needed between e-Infrastructures and efficient and forward-looking digital preservation services. Based on a desktop study and a rapid analysis of some 190 currently available tools and services for digital preservation, the deliverable provides a high-level view on the range of instruments currently on offer to support various functions within a preservation system.European Commission, FP7peer-reviewe

    The aDORe federation architecture: digital repositories at scale

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    A framework for P2P application development

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    Although Peer-to-Peer (P2P) computing has become increasingly popular over recent years, there still exist only a very small number of application domains that have exploited it on a large scale. This can be attributed to a number of reasons including the rapid evolution of P2P technologies, coupled with their often-complex nature. This paper describes an implemented abstraction framework that seeks to aid developers in building P2P applications. A selection of example P2P applications that have been developed using this framework are also presented
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