Panel: What Do Scientists Really Need to Facilitate Time to Discovery?
Moderator: David Heckerman
Speakers:
- Jeff Dozier, Professor, University of California, Santa Barbara: Snowmelt runoff, eScience, and the end of stationarity
- Bryan Traynor, Research Fellow, National Institute of Aging, National Institutes of Health: What Do Scientists Really Need…
- Jeremy Frey, Professor, University of South Hampton: Science Ajar: Chemistry Clouds and Crowds
- George Djorgovski, Professor, California Institute of Technology: Towards a New Science Methodology
Birds of a Feather Sessions
Semantics for eScience
Chairs: Evelyne Viegas and Eric Neumann
Opening Remarks: Kristin Tolle: My Ontology is not Your Ontology: A skeptic’s perspective
Keynote: Susie Stephens: Semantics for eScience
Speakers:
- Mark Wilkinson: Web 2.0 + Web 3.0 = Web 5.0?
- Chaitali Gupta: Ontological Framework for Enabling Free-Form Search in Scientific Discovery
- Yong Liu: Towards A Spatiotemporal Event-Oriented Ontology
- Mohammed Hassan Haji: Community Data Evaluation using a Semantically Enhanced Modelling Process
- Michael Towsey: BioPatML: Pattern sharing for the Genomic Sciences
- Deborah McGuinness: Semantically-Enabled Science Informatics: With Supporting Knowledge Provenance and Evolution Infrastructure Highlights
- Robert McGrath: “How to build a better Wikipedia”: Ubiquitous Infrastructure for Deep Accountability
- Fatma Y. Eldresi: NeuroSense – A Specialised Search Engine for Neuroscience WebPages
- Jeremy Gibbons: Accelerating Cancer Resaerch Using Semantics-Driven Technology
eScience Inspired Education
Chairs: Yan Xu and Eric Jul
View presentation | View session video
Speakers:
- Rosalind Reid: Can the next generation of scientists become “computational thinkers”?
- Majid Sarrafzadeh: Digital Design Project Laboratory Course Approach and Experiences
- Charlie Whittaker: Turning Biologists into Bioinformaticists – A Practical Approach
- Rubin Landau: Developing Materials for Computational Physics Education