Collection items
WAIS seminar: Publication Workflows for Scientific Data
Wednesday 23rd April 2014
Speaker(s): Willi Hasselbring
Organiser: Leslie Carr
Time: 23/04/2014 11:00-11:50
Location: B32/3077
File size: 669 Mb
Abstract
For good scientific practice, it is important that research results may be properly checked by reviewers and possibly repeated and extended by other researchers. This is of particular interest for "digital science" i.e. for in-silico experiments. In this talk, I'll discuss some issues of how software systems and services may contribute to good scientific practice. Particularly, I'll present our PubFlow approach to automate publication workflows for scientific data. The PubFlow workflow management system is based on established technology. We integrate institutional repository systems (based on EPrints) and world data centers (in marine science). PubFlow collects provenance data automatically via our monitoring framework Kieker. Provenance information describes the origins and the history of scientific data in its life cycle, and the process by which it arrived. Thus, provenance information is highly relevant to repeatability and trustworthiness of scientific results. In our evaluation in marine science, we collaborate with the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel.
Shared with the University by
Miss Kewalin Angkananon
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WAIS seminar: Ontologies on the Web: An Alternative Model
Wednesday 2nd April 2014
Speaker(s): Stefan Decker
Time: 02/04/2014 11:00-11:50
Location: B2/1083
File size: 897 Mb
Abstract
Ontologies have been promoted and used for knowledge sharing. Several models for representing ontologies have been developed in the Knowledge Representation field, in particular associated with the Semantic Web. In my talk I will summarise developments so far, and will argue that the currently advocated approaches miss certain basic properties of current distributed information sharing infrastructures (read: the Web and the Internet). I will sketch an alternative model aiming to support knowledge sharing and re-use on a global basis.
Shared with the University by
Miss Kewalin Angkananon
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WAIS seminar: Computer Science, the Revolution in Schools
Tuesday 22nd April 2014
Speaker(s): Sue Sentance
Organiser: Leslie Carr
Time: 22/04/2014 15:00-16:00
Location: B32/3077
File size: 698 Mb
Abstract
Until recently, "computing" education in English schools mainly focused on developing general Digital Literacy and Microsoft Office skills. As of this September, a new curriculum comes into effect that provides a strong emphasis on computation and programming. This change has generated some controversy in the news media (4-year-olds being forced to learn coding! boss of the government’s coding education initiative cannot code shock horror!!!!) and also some concern in the teaching profession (how can we possibly teach programming when none of the teachers know how to program)? Dr Sue Sentance will explain the work of Computing At School, a part of the BCS Academy, in galvanising universities to help teachers learn programming and other computing skills.
Come along and find out about the new English Computing Revolution - How will your children and your schools be affected? - How will our University intake change? How will our degrees have to change? - What is happening to the national perception of Computer Science?
Shared with the University by
Miss Kewalin Angkananon
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WAIS seminar: Linked Cultural Media
Wednesday 9th April 2014
Speaker(s): Guus Schreiber
Time: 09/04/2014 11:00-11:50
Location: B32/3077
File size: 546Mb
Abstract
In this talk I will discuss linked data for museums, archives and libraries. This area is known for its knowledge-rich and heterogeneous data landscape. The objects in this field range from old manuscripts to recent TV programs. Challenges in this field include common metadata schema's, inter-linking of the omnipresent vocabularies, cross-collection search strategies, user-generated annotations and object-centric versus event-centric views of data. This work can be seen as part of the rapidly evolving field of digital humanities.
Speaker Biography
Guus Schreiber
Guus is a professor of Intelligent Information Systems at the Department of Computer Science at VU University Amsterdam. Guus’ research interests are mainly in knowledge and ontology engineering with a special interest for applications in the field of cultural heritage. He was one of the key developers of the CommonKADS methodology. Guus acts as chair of W3C groups for Semantic Web standards such as RDF, OWL, SKOS and REFa. His research group is involved in a wide range of national and international research projects. He is now project coordinator of the EU Integrated project No Tube concerned with integration of Web and TV data with the help of semantics and was previously Scientific Director of the EU Network of Excellence “Knowledge Web”.
Shared with the University by
Miss Kewalin Angkananon
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WAIS seminar: Provenance Analytics and Crowdsourcing
Wednesday 26th March 2014
Speaker(s): Dr Trung Dong Huynh
Organiser: Dr Tim Chown
Time: 26/03/2014 11:00-11:50
Location: B32/3077
File size: 349Mb
Abstract
Understanding the dynamics of a crowdsourcing application and controlling the quality of the data it generates is challenging, partly due to the lack of tools to do so. Provenance is a domain-independent means to represent what happened in an application, which can help verify data and infer their quality. It can also reveal the processes that led to a data item and the interactions of contributors with it. Provenance patterns can manifest real-world phenomena such as a significant interest in a piece of content, providing an indication of its quality, or even issues such as undesirable interactions within a group of contributors. In this talk, I will present an application-independent methodology for analysing provenance graphs, constructed from provenance records, to learn about such patterns and to use them for assessing some key properties of crowdsourced data, such as their quality, in an automated manner. I will also talk about CollabMap (www.collabmap.org), an online crowdsourcing mapping application, and show how we applied the approach above to the trust classification of data generated by the crowd, achieving an accuracy over 95%.
Shared with the University by
Miss Kewalin Angkananon
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WAIS seminar: Research Discussion: Lab of Things? What Things?
Wednesday 19th March 2014
Speaker(s): Kirk Martinez, Dr Jonathon S Hare and Dr Enrico Costanza
Organiser: Dr Tim Chown
Time: 19/03/2014 11:00-11:50
Location: B32/3077
File size: 676 Mb
Abstract
The new WAIS seminar series features classic seminars, research discussions, tutorial-style presentations, and research debates.
This seminar takes the form of a research discussion which will focus on the Internet of Things (IoT) research being undertaken in WAIS and other research groups in ECS. IoT is a significant emerging research area, with funding for research available from many channels including new H2020 programmes and the TSB. We have seen examples of IoT devices being built in WAIS and other ECS groups, e.g. in sensor networking, energy monitoring via Zigbee devices, and of course Erica the Rhino (a Big Thing!).
The goal of the session is to briefly present such examples of existing Things in our lab with the intent of seeding discussion on open research questions, and therefore future work we could do towards new Things being deployed for experimentation in Building 32 or its environs. The session will discuss what 'things' we have, how they work, what new 'things' might we want to create and deploy, what components we might need to enable this, and how we might interact with these objects.
Shared with the University by
Miss Kewalin Angkananon
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WAIS seminar: Application Performance Monitoring and Architecture Discovery with Kieker
Wednesday 23rd April 2014
Speaker(s): Willi Hasselbring
Organiser: Leslie Carr
Time: 23/04/2014 14:00-15:00
Location: B32/3077
File size: 802Mb
Abstract
The internal behavior of large-scale software systems cannot be determined on the basis of static (e.g., source code) analysis alone. Kieker provides complementary dynamic analysis capabilities, i.e., monitoring/profiling and analyzing a software system's runtime behavior. Application Performance Monitoring is concerned with continuously observing a software system's performance-specific runtime behavior, including analyses like assessing service level compliance or detecting and diagnosing performance problems. Architecture Discovery is concerned with extracting architectural information from an existing software system, including both structural and behavioral aspects like identifying architectural entities (e.g., components and classes) and their interactions (e.g., local or remote procedure calls). In addition to the Architecture Discovery of Java systems, Kieker supports Architecture Discovery for other platforms, including legacy systems, for instance, inplemented in C#, C++, Visual Basic 6, COBOL or Perl. Thanks to Kieker's extensible architecture it is easy to implement and use custom extensions and plugins. Kieker was designed for continuous monitoring in production systems inducing only a very low overhead, which has been evaluated in extensive benchmark experiments. Please, refer to http://kieker-monitoring.net/ for more information.
Shared with the University by
Miss Kewalin Angkananon
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WAIS seminar: The Domain Name System: a magical mystery tour
Wednesday 12th March 2014
Speaker(s): Dr Tim Chown
Organiser:
Time: 12/03/2014 11:00-11:50
Location: B32/3077
File size: 642 Mb
Abstract
The WAIS seminar series is designed to be a blend of classic seminars, research discussions, debates and tutorials.
The Domain Name System (DNS) is a critical part of the Internet infrastructure. In this talk we begin by explaining the basic model of operation of the DNS, including how domain names are delegated and how a DNS resolver performs a DNS lookup. We then take a tour of DNS-related topics, including caching, poisoning, governance, the increasing misuse of the DNS in DDoS attacks, and the expansion of the DNS namespace to new top level domains and internationalised domain names. We also present the latest work in the IETF on DNS privacy.
The talk will be pitched such that no detailed technical knowledge is required. We hope that attendees will gain some familiarity with how the DNS works, some key issues surrounding DNS operation, and how the DNS might touch on various areas of research within WAIS.
Shared with the University by
Miss Kewalin Angkananon
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