Water management, open data and open science Karl Donert
Presentation given at Sulaymaniya University, Kurdistan: April 23-24 2019 on the challenge of open data and open science intrans-boundary water issues.
Open data: Value chains and intermediariesgodanSec
Francois van Schalkwyk (World Wide Web Foundation) presented at the 2nd International Workshop: Creating Impact with Open Data in Agriculture and Nutrition in The Hague, 10 September 2015.
Water management, open data and open science Karl Donert
Presentation given at Sulaymaniya University, Kurdistan: April 23-24 2019 on the challenge of open data and open science intrans-boundary water issues.
Open data: Value chains and intermediariesgodanSec
Francois van Schalkwyk (World Wide Web Foundation) presented at the 2nd International Workshop: Creating Impact with Open Data in Agriculture and Nutrition in The Hague, 10 September 2015.
CeRDI Research | EPA Victoria presentation Helen Thompson
Robert Milne and Helen Thompson from Federation University Australia's Centre for eResearch and Digital Innovation provide this presentation to Environment Protection Authority Victoria on 22 September 2016.
The presentation introduced CeRDI's approach to eResearch and profiled applied research projects in areas including groundwater, estuaries and waterways; soil health and soil moisture probes; natural resource management planning and climate change.
Using geographic information systems for community and environmental responsibility. Public Participatory GIS provides a means for 'citizen scientists' to not only supply
information but to participate in the consultation process.
Geographic information technologies are used in participatory settings and to support information gathering.
The value of PPGIS:
* community inclusion and engagement are integrated
* conservation and development
* sustainable natural resource management
* discussion of customary property rights
The presentation shows examples of projects where information has been collected by community groups and how it made a difference.
RINPAS Data for Decisions - Big Data and Data CommunitiesHelen Thompson
The Research Innovation Network for Precision Agriculture systems held a workshop in Sydney from 31 May to 1 June 2016 where the focus was on Data for Decisions - Big Data and Data Communities. This presentation profiles research being undertaken by Federation University Australia's Centre for eResearch and Digital Innovation which includes knowledge management, spatial research and decision tools including for agriculture.
Drought is possibly the most complex and least understood of natural hazards. The effects of drought accumulate slowly and linger for years. It is estimated that 380 million people, 38% of the world’s rural poor, live in the arid and semi-arid tropics (SAT). Of those who are vulnerable to drought, more than 90% are either smallholder farmers or landless laborers. The Committee on Science and Technology for the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, in its fifth session last year, issued a note on strategies for communicating relevant information on combating the effects of drought.
Introduction to the European Citizen Science AssociationMargaret Gold
Brief intro slides, shown at the COWM2018 Conference in Venice, which hosted the workshop “Citizen Science – New opportunities for research and innovation in the EU and the US” , in conjunction with the BILAT USA 4.0 project.
Citizen Science & Crowdsourcing in the Digital Age: Birds, Bees, Brains —> A ...Crowdsourcing Week
Geoffrey Hainess-Stiles, Passport to Knowledge, Producer/director, Carl Sagan’s original COSMOS series (1980), producer/writer THE CROWD & THE CLOUD (2017)
Libraries & Research Data Management for CO Alliance of Resrch LibrariesCarly Strasser
Keynote presentation for the Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries 2014 Research Data Management Conference, 11 July 2014. Focuses on why data management and sharing is important, and the role of libraries.
Extended version of slides used for talk on "Scaling up (and doing business with) food safety information transparency" at the Food@Cranfield network (http://www.som.cranfield.ac.uk/som/p19207/research/research-clubs/food-cranfield-research-network), on an event dedicated to Using Big Data. Presented the concept of using AGINFRA to facilitate and scale up food safety data. Part of the Big Data Europe (http://www.big-data-europe.eu) liaison & dissemination activities.
Enabling better science - Results and vision of the OpenAIRE infrastructure a...Paolo Manghi
Enabling better science: presentation on the results and vision of the OpenAIRE infrastructure and RDA Publishing Data Services Working Group in this direction.
Ross Wilkinson - Data Publication: Australian and Global Policy DevelopmentsWiley
Australia invests $AUD1-2B per annum in research data. Like most countries, it wants to get the best return possible on this data. Europe is spending E1.4B on their open data “pilot”. This means the data should be FAIR: findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable. Part of this is that data should be routinely “published” and available in a “data repository”. But what does this mean?
Ross Wilkinson
CEO, Australian National Data Service
Presented at the 2015 Wiley Publishing Seminar, 5 November, Melbourne, Australia.
CeRDI Research | EPA Victoria presentation Helen Thompson
Robert Milne and Helen Thompson from Federation University Australia's Centre for eResearch and Digital Innovation provide this presentation to Environment Protection Authority Victoria on 22 September 2016.
The presentation introduced CeRDI's approach to eResearch and profiled applied research projects in areas including groundwater, estuaries and waterways; soil health and soil moisture probes; natural resource management planning and climate change.
Using geographic information systems for community and environmental responsibility. Public Participatory GIS provides a means for 'citizen scientists' to not only supply
information but to participate in the consultation process.
Geographic information technologies are used in participatory settings and to support information gathering.
The value of PPGIS:
* community inclusion and engagement are integrated
* conservation and development
* sustainable natural resource management
* discussion of customary property rights
The presentation shows examples of projects where information has been collected by community groups and how it made a difference.
RINPAS Data for Decisions - Big Data and Data CommunitiesHelen Thompson
The Research Innovation Network for Precision Agriculture systems held a workshop in Sydney from 31 May to 1 June 2016 where the focus was on Data for Decisions - Big Data and Data Communities. This presentation profiles research being undertaken by Federation University Australia's Centre for eResearch and Digital Innovation which includes knowledge management, spatial research and decision tools including for agriculture.
Drought is possibly the most complex and least understood of natural hazards. The effects of drought accumulate slowly and linger for years. It is estimated that 380 million people, 38% of the world’s rural poor, live in the arid and semi-arid tropics (SAT). Of those who are vulnerable to drought, more than 90% are either smallholder farmers or landless laborers. The Committee on Science and Technology for the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, in its fifth session last year, issued a note on strategies for communicating relevant information on combating the effects of drought.
Introduction to the European Citizen Science AssociationMargaret Gold
Brief intro slides, shown at the COWM2018 Conference in Venice, which hosted the workshop “Citizen Science – New opportunities for research and innovation in the EU and the US” , in conjunction with the BILAT USA 4.0 project.
Citizen Science & Crowdsourcing in the Digital Age: Birds, Bees, Brains —> A ...Crowdsourcing Week
Geoffrey Hainess-Stiles, Passport to Knowledge, Producer/director, Carl Sagan’s original COSMOS series (1980), producer/writer THE CROWD & THE CLOUD (2017)
Libraries & Research Data Management for CO Alliance of Resrch LibrariesCarly Strasser
Keynote presentation for the Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries 2014 Research Data Management Conference, 11 July 2014. Focuses on why data management and sharing is important, and the role of libraries.
Extended version of slides used for talk on "Scaling up (and doing business with) food safety information transparency" at the Food@Cranfield network (http://www.som.cranfield.ac.uk/som/p19207/research/research-clubs/food-cranfield-research-network), on an event dedicated to Using Big Data. Presented the concept of using AGINFRA to facilitate and scale up food safety data. Part of the Big Data Europe (http://www.big-data-europe.eu) liaison & dissemination activities.
Enabling better science - Results and vision of the OpenAIRE infrastructure a...Paolo Manghi
Enabling better science: presentation on the results and vision of the OpenAIRE infrastructure and RDA Publishing Data Services Working Group in this direction.
Ross Wilkinson - Data Publication: Australian and Global Policy DevelopmentsWiley
Australia invests $AUD1-2B per annum in research data. Like most countries, it wants to get the best return possible on this data. Europe is spending E1.4B on their open data “pilot”. This means the data should be FAIR: findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable. Part of this is that data should be routinely “published” and available in a “data repository”. But what does this mean?
Ross Wilkinson
CEO, Australian National Data Service
Presented at the 2015 Wiley Publishing Seminar, 5 November, Melbourne, Australia.
Data Publishing at Harvard's Research Data Access SymposiumMerce Crosas
Data Publishing: The research community needs reliable, standard ways to make the data produced by scientific research available to the community, while giving credit to data authors. As a result, a new form of scholarly publication is emerging: data publishing. Data publishing - or making data reusable, citable, and accessible for long periods - is more than simply providing a link to a data file or posting the data to the researcher’s web site. We will discuss best practices, including the use of persistent identifiers and full data citations, the importance of metadata, the choice between public data and restricted data with terms of use, the workflows for collaboration and review before data release, and the role of trusted archival repositories. The Harvard Dataverse repository (and the Dataverse open-source software) provides a solution for data publishing, making it easy for researchers to follow these best practices, while satisfying data management requirements and incentivizing the sharing of research data.
Publishing your research: Research Data Management (Introduction) Jamie Bisset
Publishing your research: Research Data Management (Introduction) (November 2013) slides. Delivered as part of the Durham University Researcher Development Programme. Further Training available at https://www.dur.ac.uk/library/research/training/
Workshop about research data archiving and open access publishing at the Rese...Dag Endresen
The Research Council of Norway (RCN) organizes a workshop on 1st November 2016 to collect experiences on research data archiving and open access data publishing. The Norwegian GBIF-node will present the GBIF framework including dataset DOIs and download DOIs.
See also:
GBIF.no (2016), http://www.gbif.no/news/2016/data-archiving-ncr.html
GBIF GB21 (2014), http://www.gbif.org/newsroom/news/gb21-science-symposium
GBIF GB21 Slides, http://www.gbif.org/resource/81918
Vimeo video (2014), https://vimeo.com/107148220#t=6m28s
Data Publishing and Institutional RepositoriesVarsha Khodiyar
Slides presented at the Force16 panel discussion on 18th April 2016 "Libraries united in opening new scholarly platforms" https://www.force11.org/meetings/force2016/program/agenda/concurrent-session-libraries-united-opening-new-scholarly
Research data as the main product of research can be unique and is often the result of a complex and cost-intensive research process. Reuse and reinterpretation of such material is envisioned, not only to maintain research integrity, but also to accelerate the advancement of science by sharing results in an early stage.
Generally speaking, there is little general experience with preservation, provision and publishing of research data. Thus so far little research has been done when it comes to researching data publishing models. In history, this has partly been due to the limited existing infrastructures, but with current information technologies, modern and tailored research data provision and publishing are facilitated.
Why tailored? Characteristics of research data vary across and within disciplines. This results in more complex prerequisites/specification when compared to the process of paper publication which is very similar across disciplines. Thus, tailored models are necessary to match the individual characteristics of research data across disciplines. Within this presentation three different approaches are distinguished: object centric, text centric and data centric. Prerequisites and limitations regarding timing and room of the data provision will be discussed and experiences with each of the different models presented.
Regardless of these models, it becomes apparent that due to the individual characteristics of research data, its provision and publication is only possible with the support and knowhow of the research community. This know-how needs to be linked to the competences of infrastructure facilities.
Presentation during the 14th Association of African Universities (AAU) Conference and African Open Science Platform (AOSP)/Research Data Alliance (RDA) Workshop in Accra, Ghana, 7-8 June 2017.
Using Big Data Analytics in the Field of Agriculture A Surveyijtsrd
Big data science plays a major role in the current generation deals with the betterment of agriculture field mainly because of the population growth and climate change importance of big data is increased. Big data include the advanced analytical tools. Big data include the advanced analytical chain. Farming is undergoing a digital revolution. Smart farming is depending by the phenomenon of big data. In the field where the cereals and crop seedling growth as well as status and trends of their growth is estimated. Big data is essentially used a global crop growth monitoring system based on remote sensing is dependent on big data science. Big data analytical is a data driven technology useful in generating significant productivity improvement in various industries by collecting, storing, managing, processing, and analysing various kind of structure and unstructured data. The role of big data in agriculture provide an opportunity to increase economic gain of the formers. Gagana H. S | Arpitha H. M | Gouthami H. S "Using Big Data Analytics in the Field of Agriculture: A Survey" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-4 | Issue-4 , June 2020, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd31015.pdf Paper Url :https://www.ijtsrd.com/computer-science/other/31015/using-big-data-analytics-in-the-field-of-agriculture-a-survey/gagana-h-s
2010-11 CIARD - Bridging Rural Digital Divide (Brasil) - EnglishCIARD
Presentation by Dr. Stephen Rudgard
Chief, Knowledge and Capacity for Development
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).
III Conferência Internacional sobre Inclusão Digital e Social Brasilia, Brasil. 16-19 Novembre , 2010
Developing open data tools and portals: experiences of impact deliverygodanSec
Nienke Beintema (IFPRI) presented at the 2nd International Workshop: Creating Impact with Open Data in Agriculture and Nutrition in The Hague, 11 September 2015.
Presentation delivered during the Introductory Course: "Introduction to agricultural & food safety datasets and semantic technologies" (http://irss.iit.demokritos.gr/2014/hackathon/introductory_course) of the SemaGrow 2nd Hackathon (http://wiki.agroknow.gr/agroknow/index.php/SemaGrow_Hackathon)
4/7/2014, NCSR Demokritos, Athens, Greece
Forest and agroforesty options for building resilience in refugee situations:...World Agroforestry (ICRAF)
Humanitarian Networks and Partnerships Week (HNPW) 2020
Climate Crisis Inter-Network
"Fit for Purpose? Current Tools and Approaches to Mitigate Climate Risks in Humanitarian Settings"
HLPE 2019. Agroecological and other innovative approaches for sustainable agriculture and food systems that enhance food security and nutrition. A report by the High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition of the Committee on World Food Security, Rome
Vulnerabilities of forests and forest dependent people
Peter Minang, FTA, ICRAF
Social and environmental justice as a trigger of robust ambitious climate action and prosperous future for all
Chilean pavilion, COP 25, Madrid, 7th December 2019
An increasing multitude of insect pests and pathogens is targeting indigenous trees of natural forests, agroforestry systems, and exotic trees in planted forests in Africa. This is raising major concerns for a continent already challenged by adaptations to climate change, as it threatens a vital resource for food security of rural communities, economic growth, and ecosystem conservation. The accidental introduction through trade of non‐native species in particular is accelerating, and it adds to the damage to tree‐based landscapes by native pests and diseases. Old‐time and new invaders heavily impact planted forests of exotic eucalypts, pines, and acacias, and are spreading quickly across African regions. But many non‐native pathogens are recently found affecting important indigenous trees.
Decent work and economic growth: Potential impacts of SDG 8 on forests and fo...World Agroforestry (ICRAF)
This paper assesses the potential impact of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 8 on forests and forest-dependent people. The concepts of decent work and economic growth are put in the context of predominant development theories and paradigms (modernization, economic growth, basic needs, sustainable development) which shape the agendas of governments, private sector, civil society, and investors. These stakeholders pursue different goals and interests, with uneven prioritization of SDG 8 targets and mixed impacts on forests and livelihoods.
Forest conservation and socio-economic benefits through community forest conc...World Agroforestry (ICRAF)
With an extension of 2.1 million ha, the Maya Biosphere Reserve (MBR) in Petén, Guatemala is the largest protected area in Central America. To reconcile forest conservation and socio-economic development, community forest concessions were created in its Multiple Use Zone (MUZ) in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Operated by a community forest enterprise (CFE), and with a cycle of 25 years, the concessions grant usufruct rights to local communities on an area of about 400,000 ha. Currently, nine concessions are active, while the contracts of two concessions were cancelled and the management plan of another suspended.
Sustainable land management for improved livelihoods and environmental sustai...World Agroforestry (ICRAF)
A healthy viable multifunctional landscape has the capability of supporting sustainable agricultural productivity, providing agroforestry and forest products (timber, fuel wood, fruits, medicine, fertilizer, gum etc.) for the sustenance of mankind while providing other environmental services. However these products are increasingly becoming unavailable due to declining soil fertility, climatic extremes, and high costs of inputs. Identifying low-cost, sustainable ways to attain food security and sustainable environment for millions of smallholder farmers in Sub Saharan Africa (SSA) remains a major developmental challenge.
Rangelands are more than just grass but rather complex and biodiverse ecosystems. Covering nearly half the world’s land area, they are in need of restoration and sustainable management.
Explore our comprehensive data analysis project presentation on predicting product ad campaign performance. Learn how data-driven insights can optimize your marketing strategies and enhance campaign effectiveness. Perfect for professionals and students looking to understand the power of data analysis in advertising. for more details visit: https://bostoninstituteofanalytics.org/data-science-and-artificial-intelligence/
Adjusting primitives for graph : SHORT REPORT / NOTESSubhajit Sahu
Graph algorithms, like PageRank Compressed Sparse Row (CSR) is an adjacency-list based graph representation that is
Multiply with different modes (map)
1. Performance of sequential execution based vs OpenMP based vector multiply.
2. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector multiply.
Sum with different storage types (reduce)
1. Performance of vector element sum using float vs bfloat16 as the storage type.
Sum with different modes (reduce)
1. Performance of sequential execution based vs OpenMP based vector element sum.
2. Performance of memcpy vs in-place based CUDA based vector element sum.
3. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (memcpy).
4. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (in-place).
Sum with in-place strategies of CUDA mode (reduce)
1. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (in-place).
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Empowering the Data Analytics Ecosystem: A Laser Focus on Value
The data analytics ecosystem thrives when every component functions at its peak, unlocking the true potential of data. Here's a laser focus on key areas for an empowered ecosystem:
1. Democratize Access, Not Data:
Granular Access Controls: Provide users with self-service tools tailored to their specific needs, preventing data overload and misuse.
Data Catalogs: Implement robust data catalogs for easy discovery and understanding of available data sources.
2. Foster Collaboration with Clear Roles:
Data Mesh Architecture: Break down data silos by creating a distributed data ownership model with clear ownership and responsibilities.
Collaborative Workspaces: Utilize interactive platforms where data scientists, analysts, and domain experts can work seamlessly together.
3. Leverage Advanced Analytics Strategically:
AI-powered Automation: Automate repetitive tasks like data cleaning and feature engineering, freeing up data talent for higher-level analysis.
Right-Tool Selection: Strategically choose the most effective advanced analytics techniques (e.g., AI, ML) based on specific business problems.
4. Prioritize Data Quality with Automation:
Automated Data Validation: Implement automated data quality checks to identify and rectify errors at the source, minimizing downstream issues.
Data Lineage Tracking: Track the flow of data throughout the ecosystem, ensuring transparency and facilitating root cause analysis for errors.
5. Cultivate a Data-Driven Mindset:
Metrics-Driven Performance Management: Align KPIs and performance metrics with data-driven insights to ensure actionable decision making.
Data Storytelling Workshops: Equip stakeholders with the skills to translate complex data findings into compelling narratives that drive action.
Benefits of a Precise Ecosystem:
Sharpened Focus: Precise access and clear roles ensure everyone works with the most relevant data, maximizing efficiency.
Actionable Insights: Strategic analytics and automated quality checks lead to more reliable and actionable data insights.
Continuous Improvement: Data-driven performance management fosters a culture of learning and continuous improvement.
Sustainable Growth: Empowered by data, organizations can make informed decisions to drive sustainable growth and innovation.
By focusing on these precise actions, organizations can create an empowered data analytics ecosystem that delivers real value by driving data-driven decisions and maximizing the return on their data investment.
1. ICRAF has been laying down the necessary
policies, guidelines, processes,
infrastructure and human resource to
ensure that most if not all its research data
is made available to all stakeholders as
international public goods for use and
reuse.
“The digital revolution fueled by open data is starting to do for the modern world of agriculture
what the industrial revolution did for agricultural productivity over the past century.”
Tom Vilsack - U.S. Agriculture Secretary, G8 International Conference on Open Data for Agriculture, 29th April 2013
Publishing Research Data
Unique Visitors to Dataverse
Research Methods Group
ICRAFs RMG is ensuring quality research data is widely and easily
accessible in the public domain while maintaining authors, partners and
funders recognition.
Awareness among Scientists on the value
of data placed in the public domain for
further use has increased in recent years.
This has led to the rediscovery that the
data providing evidence to scientific
knowledge is also instrumental for
accelerating impact in society.
www.worldagroforestry.org/research-methodswww.worldagroforestry.org/dataverse