2009
DOI: 10.1109/ms.2009.22
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Software Design for Empowering Scientists

Abstract: Scientific research is increasingly digital. Some activities, like data analysis, search and simulation, can be accelerated by enabling scientists to write workflows and scripts that automate routine activities. These capture pieces of scientific method that can be shared with others. The Taverna Workbench, a widely deployed scientific workflow management system, together with the myExperiment social web site for the sharing of scientific experiments, have been devised according to six principles of designing … Show more

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Cited by 76 publications
(72 citation statements)
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References 8 publications
(6 reference statements)
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“…Autonomous computers are interconnected in order to achieve high throughput research goals. The Open Science Grid provides a collaborative research environment for communities of scientists and researchers to work together on distributed computing problems [24].…”
Section: A Distributed Computingmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Autonomous computers are interconnected in order to achieve high throughput research goals. The Open Science Grid provides a collaborative research environment for communities of scientists and researchers to work together on distributed computing problems [24].…”
Section: A Distributed Computingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…He further emphasizes the potential to enable large-scale sharing of resources within distributed, often loosely coordinated and virtual groups-an idea that according to the author is not all new. He refers to a case from 1968, when designers of the Multics operating system envisioned a computer facility operating as a utility [24]. What is new though, according to Foster is the performance of such network utilities in the light of the technological progress [24].…”
Section: A Distributed Computingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This is because each one comes prepackaged to solve particular problems for particular research communities, familiar when they open the box. This is another example of co-evolution in action, and demonstrates that adoption of a technology comes by focusing on the specific before the generic [8].…”
Section: First Generation: Isolated Adoptionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…The successful development of the Taverna workbench and myExperiment web-site (Goble and De Roure, 2007) is somewhat at odds with this tradition. De Roure and Goble, both computer scientists, describe how they first of all implemented software to meet the specific needs of specific groups of biologists, and then reflected on how these needs and hence the software might be generalised (De Roure and Goble, 2009). This bottom-up approach, as opposed to the more traditional top-down approach of software engineering, led to the production of software which proved very successful in supporting biologists.…”
Section: The Heavy Dependence Of Molecular Biology On Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%