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- !!SEEK Publications |
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- * [Journal and Refereed Publications|SEEKDocuments#JournalandRefereedPublications] |
+ * [Journal and Refereed Publications|SEEKDocuments#JournalAndRefereedPublications] |
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- * [Research Abstracts and Conference Papers and Posters|SEEKDocuments#ResearchAbstractsandConferencePapersandPosters] |
- * [Teaching Aids|SEEKDocuments#Teachingaids] |
- * [Software Tools|SEEKDocuments#Softwaretools] |
- * [White Papers and Reports|SEEKDocuments#WhitePapersandReports] |
+ * [Research Abstracts and Conference Papers and Posters|SEEKDocuments#ResearchAbstractsAndConferencePapersAndPosters] |
+ * [Software Tools|SEEKDocuments#SoftwareTools] |
+ * [White Papers and Reports|SEEKDocuments#WhitePapersAndReports] |
+ * [Teaching Aids|SEEKDocuments#TeachingAids] |
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- * Nakazawa, Y., A. T. Peterson, E. Martinez-Meyer, and A. G. Navarro-Sigenza. 2004. Seasonal niches of NearcticNeotropical migratory birds: Implications for the evolution of migration. Auk, 121:610618. |
+ * Nakazawa, Y., A. T. Peterson, E. Martinez-Meyer, and A. G. Navarro-Sigenza. 2004. Seasonal niches of Nearctic-Neotropical migratory birds: Implications for the evolution of migration. Auk, 121:610618. |
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- * Pennington, D. and Michener, W.K. [in press], The EcoGrid and the Kepler Workflow System: a new platform for conducting ecological analyses. ESA Bulletin (Emerging Technologies). |
- * Pennington, D., Zhang, J., Altintas, I., et al. [submitted], Grid-enabled scientific analysis and modeling using the Kepler Workflow System. International Journal of Geographic Information Science. |
+ * Pennington, D. and Michener, W.K. (in press), The EcoGrid and the Kepler Workflow System: a new platform for conducting ecological analyses. ESA Bulletin (Emerging Technologies). |
+ * Pennington, D., Zhang, J., Altintas, I., et al. (submitted), Grid-enabled scientific analysis and modeling using the Kepler Workflow System. International Journal of Geographic Information Science. |
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- !!Teaching aids |
- * Ludäscher, B., I. Altintas, A. Gupta, and K. Lin, Scientific Data Integration and Mediation . Tutorial at the NPACI All Hands Meeting, San Diego, 2003. Available at: http://www.sdsc.edu/~ludaesch/Paper/ahm03datamediation.ppt |
- * Ludäscher, B. CSE291: Ontologies in Data Integration, graduate class, Department of Computer Science & Engineering, University of California, San Diego, Spring 2003. Available at: http://www.sdsc.edu/~ludaesch/CSE291Spring03/ |
- |
- !!Software tools |
+ !!Software Tools |
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- * Gales, R. L. and A. M. Stewart, 2004. [Software]. Taxonomic Object Service Version 1.0. Includes a taxonomic concept resolution interface that is publicly accessible from the web and a variety of clients (perl, python, java). This is an integrated product of the SEEK/taxon working group. The software is available from the SEEK CVS server and is distributed under an open source license. The service is accessible as a web service: http://seek.ittc.ku.edu:9080/TaxObjServ/services/TaxonomicObjectService?wsdl |
+ * Gales, R. L. and A. M. Stewart, 2004. Taxonomic Object Service Version 1.0. Includes a taxonomic concept resolution interface that is publicly accessible from the web and a variety of clients (perl, python, java). This is an integrated product of the SEEK/taxon working group. The software is available from the SEEK CVS server and is distributed under an open source license. The service is accessible as a web service: http://seek.ittc.ku.edu:9080/TaxObjServ/services/TaxonomicObjectService?wsdl |
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- * Kukla, R. and J. Kennedy. 2004. [Software]. SEEK Taxonomic Concept Schema. Kukla, R. and J. Kennedy. 2004. SEEK Taxonomic Schema. Being submitted for consideration as a standard by the Taxonomic Data Working Group (TDWG). http://cvs.ecoinformatics.org/cvs/cvsweb.cgi/seek/projects/taxon/schemas/seek_napier.xs d?only_with_tag=EdinburghMeeting and http://www.soc.napier.ac.uk/tdwg/index.php?pagename=TheSchema |
- * Liu X., R. K. Peet, N.M. Franz, and L.L. Downey. 2006. ConceptMapper. ConceptMapper is a desktop tool to assist taxonomists to relate taxonomic concepts from one classification to another and to manage taxonomic concept metadata that precisely define taxonomic concepts. Database schema has been developed to hold taxonomic concept data, including scientific names, concept references, character and specimen circumscription information, parent-child relationships and third-party assertions that relate concepts between different classifications. Concept data stored in the database can be retrieved, visualized and changed through the ConceptMapper user interface. Main functions include importing , exporting, querying and viewing concept data, adding and editing relationships, concepts, references and specimens. Some other features include relationship expression validation, redo/undo support and preference settings. A help document is also developed and embedded with the tool to offer background information and usage guidance. ConceptMapper can be used by taxonomists to manage their data, especially in creating mappings across multiple classifications. It can also be used by those who need to know more about taxa in data interpretation and analysis as a convenient concept exploring tool. The ConceptMapper installation program can be downloaded from: http://cvs.ecoinformatics.org/cvs/cvsweb.cgi/seek/projects/taxon/conceptmapper/setup.zip |
+ * Kukla, R. and J. Kennedy. 2004. SEEK Taxonomic Concept Schema. Kukla, R. and J. Kennedy. 2004. SEEK Taxonomic Schema. Being submitted for consideration as a standard by the Taxonomic Data Working Group (TDWG). http://cvs.ecoinformatics.org/cvs/cvsweb.cgi/seek/projects/taxon/schemas/seek_napier.xs d?only_with_tag=EdinburghMeeting and http://www.soc.napier.ac.uk/tdwg/index.php?pagename=TheSchema |
+ * Liu X., R. K. Peet, N.M. Franz, and L.L. Downey. 2006. ConceptMapper. ConceptMapper is a desktop tool to assist taxonomists to relate taxonomic concepts from one classification to another and to manage taxonomic concept metadata that precisely define taxonomic concepts. Database schema has been developed to hold taxonomic concept data, including scientific names, concept references, character and specimen circumscription information, parent-child relationships and third-party assertions that relate concepts between different classifications. Concept data stored in the database can be retrieved, visualized and changed through the ConceptMapper user interface. Main functions include importing , exporting, querying and viewing concept data, adding and editing relationships, concepts, references and specimens. Some other features include relationship expression validation, redo/undo support and preference settings. A help document is also developed and embedded with the tool to offer background information and usage guidance. ConceptMapper can be used by taxonomists to manage their data, especially in creating mappings across multiple classifications. It can also be used by those who need to know more about taxa in data interpretation and analysis as a convenient concept exploring tool. The ConceptMapper installation program can be downloaded from: http://cvs.ecoinformatics.org/cvs/cvsweb.cgi/~checkout~/seek/projects/taxon/conceptmapper/conceptmapper.msi?rev=1.2&content-type=text/plain |
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+ |
+ !!Teaching Aids |
+ * Ludäscher, B., I. Altintas, A. Gupta, and K. Lin, Scientific Data Integration and Mediation . Tutorial at the NPACI All Hands Meeting, San Diego, 2003. Available at: http://www.sdsc.edu/~ludaesch/Paper/ahm03datamediation.ppt |
+ * Ludäscher, B. CSE291: Ontologies in Data Integration, graduate class, Department of Computer Science & Engineering, University of California, San Diego, Spring 2003. Available at: http://www.sdsc.edu/~ludaesch/CSE291Spring03/ |