Document Type
Article
Date of Original Version
3-15-2014
Department
Cell & Molecular Biology
Abstract
The National Science Foundation’s EarthCube End User Workshop was held at USC Wrigley Marine Science Center on Catalina Island, California in August 2013. The workshop was designed to explore and characterize the needs and tools available to the community that is focusing on microbial and physical oceanography research with a particular emphasis on ‘omic research. The assembled researchers outlined the existing concerns regarding the vast data resources that are being generated, and how we will deal with these resources as their volume and diversity increases. Particular attention was focused on the tools for handling and analyzing the existing data, on the need for the construction and curation of diverse federated databases, as well as development of shared, interoperable, “big-data capable” analytical tools. The key outputs from this workshop include (i) critical scientific challenges and cyber infrastructure constraints, (ii) the current and future ocean ‘omics science grand challenges and questions, and (iii) data management, analytical and associated and cyber-infrastructure capabilities required to meet critical current and future scientific challenges. The main thrust of the meeting and the outcome of this report is a definition of the ‘omics tools, technologies and infrastructures that facilitate continued advance in ocean science biology, marine biogeochemistry, and biological oceanography.
Citation/Publisher Attribution
Gilbert JA, Dick GJ, Jenkins B, Heidelberg J, Allen E, Mackey KR, DeLong EF. (2014). "Meeting report: Ocean 'omics science, technology and cyberinfrastructure: current challenges and future requirements (August 20-23, 2013)." Standards in Genomic Sciences. 9(3):1252-8. Available at: http://www.standardsingenomics.org/index.php/sigen/article/view/sigs.5749944/1133.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.