Materials Map

Discover the materials research landscape. Find experts, partners, networks.

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The Materials Map is an open tool for improving networking and interdisciplinary exchange within materials research. It enables cross-database search for cooperation and network partners and discovering of the research landscape.

The dashboard provides detailed information about the selected scientist, e.g. publications. The dashboard can be filtered and shows the relationship to co-authors in different diagrams. In addition, a link is provided to find contact information.

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Materials Map under construction

The Materials Map is still under development. In its current state, it is only based on one single data source and, thus, incomplete and contains duplicates. We are working on incorporating new open data sources like ORCID to improve the quality and the timeliness of our data. We will update Materials Map as soon as possible and kindly ask for your patience.

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in Cooperation with on an Cooperation-Score of 37%

Topics

Publications (1/1 displayed)

  • 2016A Formal Approach to Support Interoperability in Scientific Meta-workflows4citations

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Chart of shared publication
Taffoni, G.
1 / 1 shared
Arshad, J.
1 / 1 shared
Weingarten, N.
1 / 1 shared
Kiss, Tamas
1 / 2 shared
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2016

Co-Authors (by relevance)

  • Taffoni, G.
  • Arshad, J.
  • Weingarten, N.
  • Kiss, Tamas
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article

A Formal Approach to Support Interoperability in Scientific Meta-workflows

  • Taffoni, G.
  • Terstyanszky, G.
  • Arshad, J.
  • Weingarten, N.
  • Kiss, Tamas
Abstract

Scientific workflows orchestrate the execution of complex experiments frequently using distributed computing platforms. Meta-workflows represent an emerging type of such workflows which aim to reuse existing workflows from potentially different workflow systems to achieve more complex and experimentation minimizing workflow design and testing efforts. Workflow interoperability plays a profound role in achieving this objective. This paper is focused at fostering interoperability across meta-workflows that combine workflows of different workflow systems from diverse scientific domains. This is achieved by formalizing definitions of meta-workflow and its different types to standardize their data structures used to describe workflows to be published and shared via public repositories.The paper also includes thorough formalization of two workflow interoperability approaches based on this formal description: the coarse-grained and fine-grained workflow interoperability approach. The paper presents a case study from Astrophysics which successfully demonstrates the use of the concepts of meta-workflows and workflow interoperability within a scientific simulation platform.

Topics
  • impedance spectroscopy
  • experiment
  • simulation