Opening science in Europe and in the World
The year's edition put research communities, NGIs and EIROs and collaborating e-Infrastructures in the spotlight as key players for the delivery of digital services for borderless science.
Follow @EGI_eu, use hashtag #EGIConf16
Acknowledgements
EGI Conference 2016 is supported by the EC project EGI-Engage, which has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 654142.
In this session for the first time the EGI strategy 2015-2020 will be presented to the public. The role EGI in the international landscape and in the context of new initiatives of the European Commission like the Open Science Cloud will be presented.
The sessions will also offer the opportunity to publicly launch the Business Development programme.
Competence Centres in EGI bring together scientific communities, software developers and resource providers to support the co-design, co-development and dissemination of community-specific e-Infrastructures. This session brings together the representatives of Competence Centers, existing and prospective EGI user communities to facilitate the sharing of best practices and e-infrastructure development experiences across scientific disciplines. (Further information about Competence Centres: https://wiki.egi.eu/wiki/EGI-Engage:Competence_centres)
The EGI Cloud federation is an hybrid cloud composed by public, community and private cloud, all supported by the EGI Core Infrastructure Platform services and focusing on the requirements of the scientific community. This session will provide an update of the current status of the EGI cloud from the user support, operational and development perspectives, and will allow to discuss and further develop the roadmap of the technical development of FedCloud for the coming months in order to support the requirements from the different use cases presented.
Recent years have seen profound changes in how research IT services are delivered. Rather than using local services and working in discrete โsilosโ, they use a range of services provided by heterogeneous and dispersed providers across Europe. In the process of digitisation and globalisation of science, communities are moving their workflows to research e-Infrastructures that are supported by National or European funding. However, using services from multiple infrastructures can be made more complex by the varied ways in which services are described and delivered.
The European Commission recently requested major e-Infrastructure providers to simplify and facilitate discovery of these services by working together to develop a joint service catalogue. An initial definition of the concepts needed to describe such a catalogue has been developed through a collaboration between a number of EC-funded projects. This naturally raises the question on how the various service providers will organise their service portfolio management activities so to be able to feed their services into the joint service catalogue.
This workshop begins by looking at the efforts to move to a joint service catalogue across major e-Infrastructures and then at what can be done to support such a joint catalogue. It also offers the opportunity to share the experience of managing service portfolios. Then, it presents FitSM as a reference standard for service management with focus on the portfolio aspects. Another aspect that will be addressed is the EC perspective with the view on governance, sustainability and needs from the policy makers. Finally, there will be a roundtable discussion to identify areas of harmonisations and alignment of service portfolio management across e-Infrastructures for the benefit of research communities and funders.
Competence Centres in EGI bring together scientific communities, software developers and resource providers to support the co-design, co-development and dissemination of community-specific e-Infrastructures. This session brings together the representatives of Competence Centers, existing and prospective EGI user communities to facilitate the sharing of best practices and e-infrastructure development experiences across scientific disciplines. (Further information about Competence Centres: https://wiki.egi.eu/wiki/EGI-Engage:Competence_centres)
Platform as a service (PaaS) and Software as a Service (SaaS) provides users with higher abstraction layers than Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) to build and run applications without dealing with the details of the infrastructure in the case of PaaS, or to directly use the applications with thin clients or via web browsers in the case of SaaS. This double session showcases various efforts for using the EGI Federated Cloud to host both kind of solutions for researchers. The session aims to facilitate interactions with the various members of the EGI Community developing PaaS and SaaS solutions, to gather further requirements for the EGI Federated Cloud to better support them and to promote these solutions among researchers.
Recent years have seen profound changes in how research IT services are delivered. Rather than using local services and working in discrete โsilosโ, they use a range of services provided by heterogeneous and dispersed providers across Europe. In the process of digitisation and globalisation of science, communities are moving their workflows to research e-Infrastructures that are supported by National or European funding. However, using services from multiple infrastructures can be made more complex by the varied ways in which services are described and delivered.
The European Commission recently requested major e-Infrastructure providers to simplify and facilitate discovery of these services by working together to develop a joint service catalogue. An initial definition of the concepts needed to describe such a catalogue has been developed through a collaboration between a number of EC-funded projects. This naturally raises the question on how the various service providers will organise their service portfolio management activities so to be able to feed their services into the joint service catalogue.
This workshop begins by looking at the efforts to move to a joint service catalogue across major e-Infrastructures and then at what can be done to support such a joint catalogue. It also offers the opportunity to share the experience of managing service portfolios. Then, it presents FitSM as a reference standard for service management with focus on the portfolio aspects. Another aspect that will be addressed is the EC perspective with the view on governance, sustainability and needs from the policy makers. Finally, there will be a roundtable discussion to identify areas of harmonisations and alignment of service portfolio management across e-Infrastructures for the benefit of research communities and funders.
Competence Centres in EGI bring together scientific communities, software developers and resource providers to support the co-design, co-development and dissemination of community-specific e-Infrastructures. This session brings together the representatives of Competence Centers, existing and prospective EGI user communities to facilitate the sharing of best practices and e-infrastructure development experiences across scientific disciplines. (Further information about Competence Centres: https://wiki.egi.eu/wiki/EGI-Engage:Competence_centres)
This session is dedicated to EGI service providers as well as research communities and generally speaking PaaS and SaaS providers, that already today offer composite services relying on EGI.
This session will present the EGI service portfolio, the EGI Service Level Agreement framework and the status of the marketplace prototype activities.
Platform as a service (PaaS) and Software as a Service (SaaS) provides users with higher abstraction layers than Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) to build and run applications without dealing with the details of the infrastructure in the case of PaaS, or to directly use the applications with thin clients or via web browsers in the case of SaaS. This double session showcases various efforts for using the EGI Federated Cloud to host both kind of solutions for researchers. The session aims to facilitate interactions with the various members of the EGI Community developing PaaS and SaaS solutions, to gather further requirements for the EGI Federated Cloud to better support them and to promote these solutions among researchers.
THEME: "Connecting users and providers in the EOSC"
The third community workshop on the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) addresses the theme of how scientific users and service providers can each benefit from a demand/supply model to create and offer a web of innovative services for Open Science. What services should the EOSC offer and to whom, that the current eco-system is not yet delivering?
Session 1. Scientific market demand. What will scientists and their community service providers need from the EOSC of the future and who do they expect to provide these services? A group of scientists and community service providers (RIs) will bring the perspective of the scientist to identify gaps and priorities: what is new and should be developed?
Session 2. Innovating with the EOSC. What are the new capabilities that could be offered? This session examines new services for the EOSC: innovators will be invited to showcase examples of innovative services that can be offered to support their research process, from experiment to publication, in the EOSC. Are these meeting a demand? Innovators will be invited to present their vision, and in a panel these ideas will be challenged by discussing how these ideas can support better open science processes.
Session 3. Organizing the service ecosystem. It is acceptedt hat the EOSC should federate existing initiatives and open them to new providers, where researchers can become providers of services for researchers, according to the Open Science participatory principle. This session will start to address what the rules of engagement for service providers and service consumers within EOSC should be:
What does it mean to be a service provider in the EOSC? At which level in the EOSC should services be federated and made interoperable? What level of standardization can be realistically achieved across heterogeneous services? What level of standardisation is really necessary for Open Science?
The third community workshop on the European Open Science is organized with the support RI cluster initiatives (ASTERISC, CORBEL, ENVRIplus, PARTHENOS), e-Infrastructures and EIROforum organizations (CERN and EMBL-EBI).
Steering Committee
Ari Asmi/ENVRIplus Director
Marco de Vos, Managing Director ASTRON, ASTERISC rep
Tiziana Ferrari/EGI.eu Technical Director
David Foster/EIROForum, CERN
Petr Holub/BBMRI-ERIC Senior IT/Data Protection Manager and CORBEL rep
Yannick Legre/EGi.eu, Managing Director
Wouter Los/Senior advisor, ENVRIplus rep
Natalia Manola/Uni Athens, OpenAIRE
Steven Newhouse/Head of Technical Services, ELIXIR and CORBEL rep
Franco Niccolucci/Uni Firenze, PARTHENOS coordinator
The large amount of datasets now available through innovative systems for Earth Observation (EO), such as the Copernicus Programme, have the potential to enable many value-added services that can be tailored to specific public or commercial needs, resulting in new business opportunities.
The exploitation of this extensive source of information is complex and requires the close collaboration of data consumers (scientists, industry and SMEs in the Information as a Service business), ICT experts and platforms operators (public and commercial) with advanced knowledge on Earth Observation systems and e-Infrastructures.
This session will present the current EGI collaboration activities on this topic, highlighting ongoing collaborations and the first results.
Cyber attacks have become ubiquitous and attackers are targeting a wide range of services on the Internet. Resources involved in EGI are no exception and are constantly probed by attackers launching massive attacks that strive to find vulnerable machines anywhere. Successful attacks cause additional harm, including damage to the reputation of institutions and EGI.
This session is aimed at users of EGI resources, the research communities, and anyone charged with securing resources, services and virtual machines in the Cloud or Grid environment.
The attendees will be walked through a live scenario that shows basic offensives principles and techniques. Then, we will focus on how to provide proper response to incident.
THEME: "Connecting users and providers in the EOSC"
The third community workshop on the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) addresses the theme of how scientific users and service providers can each benefit from a demand/supply model to create and offer a web of innovative services for Open Science. What services should the EOSC offer and to whom, that the current eco-system is not yet delivering?
Session 1. Scientific market demand. What will scientists and their community service providers need from the EOSC of the future and who do they expect to provide these services? A group of scientists and community service providers (RIs) will bring the perspective of the scientist to identify gaps and priorities: what is new and should be developed?
Session 2. Innovating with the EOSC. What are the new capabilities that could be offered? This session examines new services for the EOSC: innovators will be invited to showcase examples of innovative services that can be offered to support their research process, from experiment to publication, in the EOSC. Are these meeting a demand? Innovators will be invited to present their vision, and in a panel these ideas will be challenged by discussing how these ideas can support better open science processes.
Session 3. Organizing the service ecosystem. It is acceptedt hat the EOSC should federate existing initiatives and open them to new providers, where researchers can become providers of services for researchers, according to the Open Science participatory principle. This session will start to address what the rules of engagement for service providers and service consumers within EOSC should be:
What does it mean to be a service provider in the EOSC? At which level in the EOSC should services be federated and made interoperable? What level of standardization can be realistically achieved across heterogeneous services? What level of standardisation is really necessary for Open Science?
The third community workshop on the European Open Science is organized with the support RI cluster initiatives (ASTERISC, CORBEL, ENVRIplus, PARTHENOS), e-Infrastructures and EIROforum organizations (CERN and EMBL-EBI).
Steering Committee
Ari Asmi/ENVRIplus Director
Marco de Vos, Managing Director ASTRON, ASTERISC rep
Tiziana Ferrari/EGI.eu Technical Director
David Foster/EIROForum, CERN
Petr Holub/BBMRI-ERIC Senior IT/Data Protection Manager and CORBEL rep
Yannick Legre/EGi.eu, Managing Director
Wouter Los/Senior advisor, ENVRIplus rep
Natalia Manola/Uni Athens, OpenAIRE
Steven Newhouse/Head of Technical Services, ELIXIR and CORBEL rep
Franco Niccolucci/Uni Firenze, PARTHENOS coordinator
EUDAT is a collaborative Pan-European infrastructure providing research
data services, training and consultancy for researchers, research
communities, research infrastructures and data centres. EUDATโs vision is
to enable European researchers and practitioners from any research
discipline to preserve, find, access, and process data in a trusted
environment, as part of a Collaborative Data Infrastructure (CDI)
conceived as a network of collaborating, cooperating centres, combining
the richness of numerous community-specific data repositories with the
permanence and persistence of some of Europeโs largest scientific data
centres.
The EGI-EUDAT collaboration started in March 2016 with the main to
harmonise the two infrastructures, including technical interoperability,
authentication, authorisation and identity management, policy and
operations. The main objective of this work is to provide end-users with a
seamless access to an integrated infrastructure offering both EGI and
EUDAT services and, then, pairing data and high-throughput computing
resources together.
This session reviews the status of this work, with input from communities
who are keen to use the benefits of both EGI and EUDAT infrastructures.
It looks at the barriers we have encountered and what we are doing to
resolve them to make interoperability a reality for users.
Cyber attacks have become ubiquitous and attackers are targeting a wide range of services on the Internet. Resources involved in EGI are no exception and are constantly probed by attackers launching massive attacks that strive to find vulnerable machines anywhere. Successful attacks cause additional harm, including damage to the reputation of institutions and EGI.
This session is aimed at users of EGI resources, the research communities, and anyone charged with securing resources, services and virtual machines in the Cloud or Grid environment.
The attendees will be walked through a live scenario that shows basic offensives principles and techniques. Then, we will focus on how to provide proper response to incident.
THEME: "Connecting users and providers in the EOSC"
The third community workshop on the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) addresses the theme of how scientific users and service providers can each benefit from a demand/supply model to create and offer a web of innovative services for Open Science. What services should the EOSC offer and to whom, that the current eco-system is not yet delivering?
Session 1. Scientific market demand. What will scientists and their community service providers need from the EOSC of the future and who do they expect to provide these services? A group of scientists and community service providers (RIs) will bring the perspective of the scientist to identify gaps and priorities: what is new and should be developed?
Session 2. Innovating with the EOSC. What are the new capabilities that could be offered? This session examines new services for the EOSC: innovators will be invited to showcase examples of innovative services that can be offered to support their research process, from experiment to publication, in the EOSC. Are these meeting a demand? Innovators will be invited to present their vision, and in a panel these ideas will be challenged by discussing how these ideas can support better open science processes.
Session 3. Organizing the service ecosystem. It is acceptedt hat the EOSC should federate existing initiatives and open them to new providers, where researchers can become providers of services for researchers, according to the Open Science participatory principle. This session will start to address what the rules of engagement for service providers and service consumers within EOSC should be:
What does it mean to be a service provider in the EOSC? At which level in the EOSC should services be federated and made interoperable? What level of standardization can be realistically achieved across heterogeneous services? What level of standardisation is really necessary for Open Science?
The third community workshop on the European Open Science is organized with the support RI cluster initiatives (ASTERISC, CORBEL, ENVRIplus, PARTHENOS), e-Infrastructures and EIROforum organizations (CERN and EMBL-EBI).
Steering Committee
Ari Asmi/ENVRIplus Director
Marco de Vos, Managing Director ASTRON, ASTERISC rep
Tiziana Ferrari/EGI.eu Technical Director
David Foster/EIROForum, CERN
Petr Holub/BBMRI-ERIC Senior IT/Data Protection Manager and CORBEL rep
Yannick Legre/EGi.eu, Managing Director
Wouter Los/Senior advisor, ENVRIplus rep
Natalia Manola/Uni Athens, OpenAIRE
Steven Newhouse/Head of Technical Services, ELIXIR and CORBEL rep
Franco Niccolucci/Uni Firenze, PARTHENOS coordinator
EGI infrastructure is evolving to open to new authentication technologies, making easier for new user communities to adopt EGI services. The evolution of the EGI AAI technologies is driven by the EGI-Engage project, and it is a close collaboration with the other European initiatives working towards a more effective integration of federated identitiy management, such as the AARC project. This session will include presentations about the current status of the AAI integration in the existing EGI services, and the design of a new set of services to facilitate federated identity adoption for EGI users. During the session there will be also presentations updating about the work done by other initiatives, and the results that directly or indirectly benefit the EGI ecosystem.
Attending the session, participants will learn about the progresses in the EGI AAI platform development, the progresses in other related initiatives, and how their work, either as a service provider, user community, or researcher, can benefit from these results. Providing feedback to the presenters, participants will help to steer the ongoing evolution, by adding new use cases, and new requirements, to make the work of EGI as close as possible to their needs.
A key output of the EGI-ENGAGE project is an integrated solution of data and computing services that forms an integral component of the Open Commons solution. This solution uses the new Open Data platform to provide capabilities to use, reuse and publish data in addition to making the data readily accessible for processing by computing services.
This session examines the progress taking place within ENGAGE to develop Data as a Service (DaaS) using the Open Data platform to meet the needs of communities. Different aspects of DaaS will be covered, from the policy to the technical aspects. The session will include input from user communities who are providing their requirements for DaaS and the status of pilot projects.
The HNSciCloud Pre-Commercial Procurement (PCP) project (http://www.helix-nebula.eu/about-hnscicloud) started in January 2016 and has defined a set of use-cases supporting the needs of user groups from multiple disciplines including physics, astronomy, life sciences and the long tail of science.
An open market consultation will be held at CERN on 17 March 2016 (http://www.helix-nebula.eu/events/hnscicloud-pre-commercial-procurement-open-market-consultation-omc)
The session builds on the plan elaborated in Lisbon (May 2015) and Bari (November 2015) to review the potential interest of the PCP approach to the Research Infrastructures participating in the EGI-Engage cross-border procurement activity: BBMRI, DARIAH, EPOS and LifeWatch.
The attendants are invited to join us at the Maslow Cafe in Science Park for drinks, bitterballen and other hapjes. Please don't forget to bring your badge.
The aim of the Human Brain Project (HBP) is to accelerate our understanding of the human brain by integrating global neuroscience knowledge and data into supercomputer-based models and simulations. This will be achieved, in part, by engaging the European and global research communities using six collaborative ICT platforms: Neuroinformatics, Brain Simulation, High Performance Computing, Medical Informatics, High Performance Computing, Neuromorphic Computing and Neurorobotics.
This session is intended for
ยท NeuroInformatics communities interested in collaborations, in particular with HBP
ยท NGIs cloud providers interested in how HBP can benefit from cloud provisioning for its big data integration needs and willing to support HBP
ยท Technology providers interested in offering solutions and participating to tests
ยท Members of the Federated Data Virtual Team
In this talk I will present new approaches for computer-aided diagnosis of neurodegenerative disease, based on large-scale quantitative modelling of the ageing brain. The main idea is to construct โgrowthโ curves that characterise the distribution of MRI-derived markers in a healthy population as a function of age. These growth curves can then serve as reference charts to which patient data can be compared. I will explain the methodology, show some very recent results, and finally discuss the e-infrastructural needs for this type of research, in which thousands of MRI scans need to be processed.
Speaker's biography
Dr. Stefan Klein is assistant-professor in the Biomedical Imaging Group Rotterdam, Erasmus MC, the Netherlands, and leading a research line on the development and evaluation of advanced medical image analysis techniques, focussing on a) image registration methodology for fusion of multimodal, longitudinal, and dynamic imaging data and b) quantitative MRI analysis, and c) computer-aided diagnosis. He is one of the two principal developers of the widely-used open source Elastix software for medical image registration (http://elastix.isi.uu.nl). Recently, he has organised a successful โgrand challengeโ on computer aided diagnosis of dementia based on brain MRI (http://caddementia.grand-challenge.org). In this challenge, 29 methods for computer-aided diagnosis of dementia based on structural MRI were evaluated in an objective, standardised way on a large publicly available dataset.
"Science Gateways" are web-based enterprise information systems that facilitate access to information infrastructures in the form of customized and community-specific interfaces to data collections, computational tools, and collaborative services. In other words, Science Gateways integrate and customize infrastructure services into one system to provide workflow automation, to increase usability and scalability, and to guarantee security and traceability. "Rosemary" is a software platform that can be customized programmatically to develop Science Gateways for various domains and applications. Rosemary provides functions for data, computing, collaboration, and traceability management. So far, Rosemary has been used to develop three Science Gateways for specific domains and applications: Computational Neuroscience, In Vitro Fertilization, and Genomics gateway.
In this talk the functions provided by Rosemary are presented and explained using the Computational Neuroscience use-case. The talk also includes a short demo to demonstrate how Rosemary users can import and integrate data from various external data sources (e.g., XNAT) into the gateway, perform advanced search on multi-site data, organize and manage their data, process their data on distributed computing platforms (e.g., Grid) using the provided apps (workflows), manage their data processing, and collaborate and communicate with their colleagues. The unique concepts and flexibility of Rosemary that enable quick development of new effective Science Gateways are also highlighted.
Speaker's biography
Shayan Shahand is a postdoctoral researcher, data scientist, and distributed software architect at the AMC e-Science group of the Academic Medical Center of the University of Amsterdam. He obtained his PhD in e-Science from the University of Amsterdam with doctoral thesis entitled "Science Gateways for Biomedical Big Data Analysis". He obtained his masterโs in computer engineering (distributed systems) and his bachelorโs in software engineering. He aims to facilitate collaborative data- and compute-intensive [biomedical] data-driven science. He is enthusiastic about new technologies and he enjoys programming.
Speaker's biography
Originally from a software development background, Matthew has been delivering computing and data services to scientific research communities since 2003. More recently Matthew was responsible for running the data archive for WLCG Tier 1 at STFC in the UK. Since joining EGI in 2015, Matthew is involved in the EGI-Engage and INDIGO-DataCloud projects.Different international research collaborations and infrastructures are close to their implementation stage and time is ripe to reflect on status and perspectives of federating e-infrastructures world wide to serve these research communities. Europe and other continents benefits from increasing research community coordination thanks to funding initiatives that support the implementation of thematic research infrastructures. In parallel to this, nowadays, research practice is increasingly and in many cases exclusively data driven. Knowledge of how to use tools to manipulate research data, and the availability of e-infrastructures to support them, are foundational. Along with this, new types of communities are forming around interests in digital tools, computing facilities and data repositories. By making infrastructure services, community engagement and training inseparable, existing communities can be empowered by new ways of doing research, and new communities can be created around tools and data. Life science and bioinformatics, brain research, astronomy and environmental sciences are examples of prominent research domains where international collaborations are quickly expanding. While international research communities need increasing computing,storage, data and other digital resources to advance knowledge, computing storage and other digital resources are increasingly becoming commodity services offered by large commercial players. In this new landscape e-Infrastructures face the challenge of reviewing their existing business models, of establishing partnerships with the private sectors, and provide an environment where open science can flourish. This session provides an opportunity to different e-Infrastructure representatives to discuss status, opportunities, common problems, and investigate new collaborations and joint strategies. This workshop puts together partners that recognize the need of collaboration between international e-Infrastructures and are willing to cooperate to join up research support efforts worldwide.
The long-tail of science refers to the individual researchers and small laboratories who - opposed to large, expensive collaborations - do not have access to computational resources and online services to manage and analyse large amount of data.
The EGI-Engage project established a European platform that allows individual researchers and small research teams to perform compute and data-intensive simulations on large, distributed networks of computers in a user friendly way. We will review the status of this platform, and with interested service providers and scientific communities will discuss next steps in expanding the platform with new services and capabilities to serve typical long-tail use cases.
WS-PGRADE/gUSE science gateway framework has been used by more than 30 user communities within the EU FP7 SCI-BUS project. These communities cover a wide range of scientific areas including astrophysics, chemist, bio-medical research, seismology, meteorology, etc. Since the closing date of SCI-BUS WS-PGRADE/gUSE in October 2014 WS-PGRADE/has been actively further developed focusing on the access of clouds and large data storages.
Recently WS-PGRADE/gUSE has been activated as a gateway service in the EGI Long-Tail of Science platform. This means that users can login to this gateway as it is required by the user management policy of the EGI Long-Tail of Science platform.
This gateway has two major ways of usability:
1. Simplified wizard access to EGI FedCloud resources that are partners in the Long-Tail of Science VO. This usage of the gateway targets the novice cloud users.
2. Workflow-oriented usage of the gateway targeting advance users who can manage to create even complex workflow applications that can run in the grid and cloud resources of the EGI infrastructure.
The talk will describe in detail the usage of the wizard option by which user can submit single and parameter sweep jobs into the clouds of the EGI FedCloud without learning anything on these cloud resources.
Speaker's biography
Peter KACSUK is the Head of the Research Laboratory of the Parallel and Distributed Systems. He received his MSc and university doctorate degrees from the Technical University of Budapest in 1976 and 1984, respectively. He received the kandidat degree from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 1989. He habilitated at the University of Vienna in 1997. He recieved his professor title from the Hungarian President in 1999 and the Doctor of Academy degree (DSc) from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 2001. He has been a part-time full professor at the Cavendish School of Computer Science of the University of Westminster in London and at the Eรถtvรถs Lรณrรกnd University of Science in Budapest since 2001. He served as visiting scientist or professor several times at various universities of Austria, England, Germany, Spain, Australia and Japan. He has published two books, two lecture notes and more than 200 scientific papers on parallel computer architectures, parallel software engineering and Grid computing. He is co-editor-in-chief of the Journal of Grid Computing published by Springer.
Environmental and health issues will dominate 21st century. Over the coming 10-15 years the generation of vast amounts of data created by these research domains will create significant challenges for capturing, managing and processing of this data. It is important to understand their challenges and capture specific requirements.
There are many opportunities and challenges to capture. New computing technologies such as cloud computing, cannot provide the entire solution in their generic forms but, can contribute to significantly advance our understanding and how we might address them.
This session will illustrate data and computational requirements in environmental and health research, exemplify several existing research infrastructures supporting user-oriented workflows for these domains, identify newly emerged use cases and requirements for EGI, and exploit service and tools to support them.
Speaker's biography
Ignacio Blanquer (Ph.D.), associate professor at UPV since 1999 and he currently leads the High Performance and Grid Computing Research Group of the Institute of Instrumentation for Molecular Imaging. He is also a member of the GIBI 2^30 research group on medical imaging at โLa Feโ Polythecnic University Hospital. He is currently the project co-coordinator of EUBra-BIGSEA and CLUVIEM.Speaker's biography
Jesus Cuenca is Senior System Manager at CNB-CSIC. He has a Ms in Computer Science. He has worked in telecommunications, education and image processing projects, like Scipion. His main interests are HPC and virtualization.Laura del Caรฑo is a Senior Software Engineer with a Ms in Physics. She has worked in the area of IT consultancy on applications design and development. She has also worked in different European research projects, such as the JCOP Framework, to build the Control Systems for the LHC detectors at CERN, or EGEE and GRIDCC, related to development of Grid infrastructures for science. She currently works on the Scipion project, where she started as a developer and is now in charge of the Cloud deployment.
Speaker's biography
Dr. Zhiming Zhao is currently a senior researcher in University of Amsterdam. He leads research and development activities in the data for science theme in the EU H2020 ENVRIPLUS project. He is the scientific coordinator of the H2020 SWITCH project and is also involved in the H2020 VRE4EIC project.Speaker's biography
Leandro Lombardo: He is part of Engineering Ingegneria Informatica S.p.A. since 2001. In last years he has been involved in Future Internet Public-Private Partnership projects as FINESCE and FIWARE. He is now involved in the EMSODEV project where his is committed to the design, set-up and implementation of the data management platform, which is based on a big data paradigm and on existing cutting-edge open source technologies. He is mainly focused in Data Management, Data Processing Architectures and Data Analytics.Pasquale Andriani: He is part of Engineering Ingegneria Informatica S.p.A since 2005 and he participated in several EU co-funded projects as CASPAR, SCIDIP-ES, BeAware. In last years he has been involved in the Future Internet Public-Private Partnership programme, participating in FINSENY, FINESCE and FIWARE projects. He is currently leading the design and the development of the data management platform of the EMSODEV project. Since June 2015, he has been involved in the Big Data Value Association with a specific interest in Data Management and Data Processing Architecture priorities and sub-groups.
EGI role and opportunities in H2020 and the Digital Single Market
EGI relies on its participants, the national service providers - NGIs - and European Research Organizations to provide advanced services and the needed support to different user groups.
This sessions puts the the EGI participants in the spot light and discusses their role, opportunities, mission and funding opportunities, in the future landscape of internationally connected research infrastructures and research projects.
EGI role and opportunities in H2020 and the Digital Single Market
EGI relies on its participants, the national service providers - NGIs - and European Research Organizations to provide advanced services and the needed support to different user groups.
This sessions puts the the EGI participants in the spot light and discusses their role, opportunities, mission and funding opportunities, in the future landscape of internationally connected research infrastructures and research projects.