91,855 research outputs found

    Collaborative Ontology Development — Distributed Architecture and Visualization

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    In this paper we present the architecture of the browser-based community-driven ontology engineering platform Ontoverse. We will present the architectural needs and designs for an extensible collaborative ontology platform as well as the current implementation based on tuplespaces. In this context we briefly introduce the SQLSpaces and the Semantic Web Application Toolkit (SWAT). To provide interactive collaborative means for editing, merging, and discussing about ontologies adequate visualization techniques are needed to support the ontology designers and ontology users. Therefore we introduce a visualization method called SmartTree that implements focus and context techniques

    SPECTRUM-BASED AND COLLABORATIVE NETWORK TOPOLOGY ANALYSIS AND VISUALIZATION

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    Networks are of significant importance in many application domains, such as World Wide Web and social networks, which often embed rich topological information. Since network topology captures the organization of network nodes and links, studying net- work topology is very important to network analysis. In this dissertation, we study networks by analyzing their topology structure to explore community structure, the relationship among network members and links as well as their importance to the belonged communities. We provide new network visualization methods by studying network topology through two aspects: spectrum-based and collaborative visualiza- tion techniques. For the spectrum-based network visualization, we use eigenvalues and eigenvectors to express network topological features instead of using network datasets directly. We provide a visual analytics approach to analyze unsigned networks based on re- cent achievements on spectrum-based analysis techniques which utilize the features of node distribution and coordinates in the high dimensional spectral space. To assist the interactive exploration of network topologies, we have designed network visual- ization and interactive analysis methods allowing users to explore the global topology structure. Further, to address the question of real-life applications involving of both positive and negative relationships, we present a spectral analysis framework to study both signed and unsigned networks. Our framework concentrates on two problems of net- work analysis - what are the important spectral patterns and how to use them to study signed networks. Based on the framework, we present visual analysis methods, which guide the selection of k-dimensional spectral space and interactive exploration of network topology. With the increasing complexity and volume of dynamic networks, it is important to adopt strategies of joint decision-making through developing collaborative visualiza- tion approaches. Thus, we design and develop a collaborative detection mechanism with matrix visualization for complex intrusion detection applications. We establish a set of collaboration guidelines for team coordination with distributed visualization tools. We apply them to generate a prototype system with interactions that facilitates collaborative visual analysis. In order to evaluate the collaborative detection mechanism, a formal user study is presented. The user study monitored participants to collaborate under co-located and distributed collaboration environments to tackle the problems of intrusion detection. We have observed participants’ behaviors and collected their performances from the aspects of coordination and communication. Based on the results, we conclude several coordination strategies and summarize the values of communication for collaborative visualization. Our visualization methods have been demonstrated to be efficient topology explo- ration with both synthetic and real-life datasets in spectrum-based and collaborative exploration. We believe that our methods can provide useful information for future design and development of network topology visualization system

    A component-based middleware framework for configurable and reconfigurable Grid computing

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    Significant progress has been made in the design and development of Grid middleware which, in its present form, is founded on Web services technologies. However, we argue that present-day Grid middleware is severely limited in supporting projected next-generation applications which will involve pervasive and heterogeneous networked infrastructures, and advanced services such as collaborative distributed visualization. In this paper we discuss a new Grid middleware framework that features (i) support for advanced network services based on the novel concept of pluggable overlay networks, (ii) an architectural framework for constructing bespoke Grid middleware platforms in terms of 'middleware domains' such as extensible interaction types and resource discovery. We believe that such features will become increasingly essential with the emergence of next-generation e-Science applications. Copyright (c) 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd

    Methods and design issues for next generation network-aware applications

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    Networks are becoming an essential component of modern cyberinfrastructure and this work describes methods of designing distributed applications for high-speed networks to improve application scalability, performance and capabilities. As the amount of data generated by scientific applications continues to grow, to be able to handle and process it, applications should be designed to use parallel, distributed resources and high-speed networks. For scalable application design developers should move away from the current component-based approach and implement instead an integrated, non-layered architecture where applications can use specialized low-level interfaces. The main focus of this research is on interactive, collaborative visualization of large datasets. This work describes how a visualization application can be improved through using distributed resources and high-speed network links to interactively visualize tens of gigabytes of data and handle terabyte datasets while maintaining high quality. The application supports interactive frame rates, high resolution, collaborative visualization and sustains remote I/O bandwidths of several Gbps (up to 30 times faster than local I/O). Motivated by the distributed visualization application, this work also researches remote data access systems. Because wide-area networks may have a high latency, the remote I/O system uses an architecture that effectively hides latency. Five remote data access architectures are analyzed and the results show that an architecture that combines bulk and pipeline processing is the best solution for high-throughput remote data access. The resulting system, also supporting high-speed transport protocols and configurable remote operations, is up to 400 times faster than a comparable existing remote data access system. Transport protocols are compared to understand which protocol can best utilize high-speed network connections, concluding that a rate-based protocol is the best solution, being 8 times faster than standard TCP. An HD-based remote teaching application experiment is conducted, illustrating the potential of network-aware applications in a production environment. Future research areas are presented, with emphasis on network-aware optimization, execution and deployment scenarios

    Using visual analytics to develop situation awareness in astrophysics

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    We present a novel collaborative visual analytics application for cognitively overloaded users in the astrophysics domain. The system was developed for scientists who need to analyze heterogeneous, complex data under time pressure, and make predictions and time-critical decisions rapidly and correctly under a constant influx of changing data. The Sunfall Data Taking system utilizes several novel visualization and analysis techniques to enable a team of geographically distributed domain specialists to effectively and remotely maneuver a custom-built instrument under challenging operational conditions. Sunfall Data Taking has been in production use for 2 years by a major international astrophysics collaboration (the largest data volume supernova search currently in operation), and has substantially improved the operational efficiency of its users. We describe the system design process by an interdisciplinary team, the system architecture and the results of an informal usability evaluation of the production system by domain experts in the context of Endsley's three levels of situation awareness

    Scientific Visualization for Atmospheric Data Analysis in Collaborative Virtual Environments

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    The three year European research project CROSS DRIVE (Collaborative Rover Operations and Planetary Science Analysis System based on Distributed Remote and Interactive Virtual Environments) started in January 2014. The research and development within this project is motivated by three use case studies: landing site characterization, atmospheric science and rover target selection. Currently the implementation for the second use case is in its final phase. Here, the requirements were generated based on the domain experts input and lead to development and integration of appropriate methods for visualization and analysis of atmospheric data. The methods range from volume rendering, interactive slicing, iso-surface techniques to interactive probing. All visualization methods are integrated in DLR’s Terrain Rendering application. With this, the high resolution surface data visualization can be enriched with additional methods appropriate for atmospheric data sets. This results in an integrated virtual environment where the scientist has the possibility to interactively explore his data sets directly within the correct context. The data sets include volumetric data of the martian atmosphere, precomputed two dimensional maps and vertical profiles. In most cases the surface data as well as the atmospheric data has global coverage and is of time dependent nature. Furthermore, all interaction is synchronized between different connected application  instances, allowing for collaborative sessions between distant experts

    Collaborative virtual reality platform for visualizing space data and mission planning

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    This paper presents the system architecture of a collaborative virtual environment in which distributed multidisciplinary teams involved in space exploration activities come together and explore areas of scientific interest of a planet for future missions. The aim is to reduce the current challenges of distributed scientific and engineering meetings that prevent the exploitation of their collaborative potential, as, at present, expertise, tools and datasets are fragmented. This paper investigates the functional characteristics of a software framework that addresses these challenges following the design science research methodology in the context of the space industry and research. An implementation of the proposed architecture and a validation process with end users, based on the execution of different use cases, are described. These use cases cover relevant aspects of real science analysis and operation, including planetary data visualization, as the system aims at being used in future European missions. This validation suggests that the system has the potential to enhance the way space scientists will conduct space science research in the future
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