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- Publication . Other literature type . Article . 2018Open Access EnglishAuthors:Atherton, Christopher John; Barton, Thomas; Basney, Jim; Broeder, Daan; Costa, Alessandro; Daalen, Mirjam Van; Dyke, Stephanie; Elbers, Willem; Enell, Carl-Fredrik; Fasanelli, Enrico Maria Vincenzo; +30 moreAtherton, Christopher John; Barton, Thomas; Basney, Jim; Broeder, Daan; Costa, Alessandro; Daalen, Mirjam Van; Dyke, Stephanie; Elbers, Willem; Enell, Carl-Fredrik; Fasanelli, Enrico Maria Vincenzo; Fernandes, João; Florio, Licia; Gietz, Peter; Groep, David L.; Junker, Matthias Bernhard; Kanellopoulos, Christos; Kelsey, David; Kershaw, Philip; Knapic, Cristina; Kollegger, Thorsten; Koranda, Scott; Linden, Mikael; Marinic, Filip; Matyska, Ludek; Nyrönen, Tommi Henrik; Paetow, Stefan; Paglione, Laura A D; Parlati, Sandra; Phillips, Christopher; Prochazka, Michal; Rees, Nicholas; Short, Hannah; Stevanovic, Uros; Tartakovsky, Michael; Venekamp, Gerben; Vitez, Tom; Wartel, Romain; Whalen, Christopher; White, John; Zwölf, Carlo Maria;Country: GermanyProject: EC | GN4-2 (731122), EC | IS-ENES2 (312979), EC | IS-ENES (228203), EC | CALIPSOplus (730872), EC | CORBEL (654248), EC | AARC2 (730941), EC | EOSC-hub (777536), EC | ELIXIR-EXCELERATE (676559), NSF | Data Handling and Analysi... (1700765)
The authors also acknowledge the support and collaboration of many other colleagues in their respective institutes, research communities and IT Infrastructures, together with the funding received by these from many different sources. These include but are not limited to the following: (i) The Worldwide LHC Computing Grid (WLCG) project is a global collaboration of more than 170 computing centres in 43 countries, linking up national and international grid infrastructures. Funding is acknowledged from many national funding bodies and we acknowledge the support of several operational infrastructures including EGI, OSG and NDGF/NeIC. (ii) EGI acknowledges the funding and support received from the European Commission and the many National Grid Initiatives and other members. EOSC-hub receives funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 777536. (iii) The work leading to these results has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No. 730941 (AARC2). (iv) Work on the development of ESGF's identity management system has been supported by The UK Natural Environment Research Council and funding from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration through projects IS-ENES (grant agreement no 228203) and IS-ENES2 (grant agreement no 312979). (v) Ludek Matyska and Michal Prochazka acknowledge funding from the RI ELIXIR CZ project funded by MEYS Czech Republic No. LM2015047. (vi) Scott Koranda acknowledges support provided by the United States National Science Foundation under Grant No. PHY-1700765. (vii) GÉANT Association on behalf of the GN4 Phase 2 project (GN4-2).The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No. 731122(GN4-2). (viii) ELIXIR acknowledges support from Research Infrastructure programme of Horizon 2020 grant No 676559 EXCELERATE. (ix) CORBEL life science cluster acknowledges support from Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 654248. (x) Mirjam van Daalen acknowledges that the research leading to this result has been supported by the project CALIPSOplus under the Grant Agreement 730872 from the EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation HORIZON 2020. (xi) EISCAT is an international association supported by research organisations in China (CRIRP), Finland (SA), Japan (NIPR), Norway (NFR), Sweden (VR), and the United Kingdom (NERC). This white-paper expresses common requirements of Research Communities seeking to leverage Identity Federation for Authentication and Authorisation. Recommendations are made to Stakeholders to guide the future evolution of Federated Identity Management in a direction that better satisfies research use cases. The authors represent research communities, Research Services, Infrastructures, Identity Federations and Interfederations, with a joint motivation to ease collaboration for distributed researchers. The content has been edited collaboratively by the Federated Identity Management for Research (FIM4R) Community, with input sought at conferences and meetings in Europe, Asia and North America.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . Conference object . 2014Open AccessAuthors:Duccio Troiano; Andrés García Morro; Alessandro Merlo; Eduardo Vendrell Vidal;Duccio Troiano; Andrés García Morro; Alessandro Merlo; Eduardo Vendrell Vidal;Publisher: SpringerCountry: Italy
Despite extensive research having been conducted on the subject, the problem of three-dimensional information systems for historical cities is actually still unresolved. In addition, commercially available software seems to be increasingly aiming at a quick development of unspecific urban settings, rather than at a metrically and perceptively faithful representation of reality. In this scenario, the SIUR 3D software (Sistema Informativo URbano tridimensionale) is based on a management structure that links an interactive, photorealistic and metrically reliable model of a city with a qualitative database of the historical, archaeological and material scope of an architectural part. Such application uses the Unity 3D game engine for geometrical models management and is equipped for online data sharing.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Report . 2019EnglishAuthors:Szprot, Jakub; Arpagaus, Brigitte; Ciula, Arianna; Clivaz, Claire; Gabay, Simon; Honegger, Matthieu; Hughes, Lorna; Immenhauser, Beat; Jakeman, Neil; Lhotak, Martin; +8 moreSzprot, Jakub; Arpagaus, Brigitte; Ciula, Arianna; Clivaz, Claire; Gabay, Simon; Honegger, Matthieu; Hughes, Lorna; Immenhauser, Beat; Jakeman, Neil; Lhotak, Martin; Romanova, Natasha; Ros, Salvador; Schulthess, Sara; Tahko, Tuuli; Tolonen, Mikko; Erdinast Vulcan, Daphna; Willa, Pierre; Zehavi, Ora;Publisher: HAL CCSDCountry: FranceProject: EC | DESIR (731081)
This report provides information about activities and progress towards establishing DARIAH membership in six countries: the Czech Republic, Finland, Israel, Spain, Switzerland, and the UK, which took place between July and December 2019. Previous activities were described in detail in the D3.2 - Regularly Monitor Country-Specific Progress in Enabling New DARIAH Membership. During the project lifetime, the Czech Republic joined DARIAH ERIC; in other countries, collaboration with DARIAH has been greatly strengthened and significant progress regarding DARIAH membership has been achieved. The report also outlines the next steps in the accession processes, building on the results of the DESIR project.
- Publication . Report . 2019EnglishAuthors:Tahko, Tuuli; Zehavi, Ora; Lhotak, Martin; Romanova, Natasha; Clivaz, Claire; Ros, Salvador; Raciti, Marco;Tahko, Tuuli; Zehavi, Ora; Lhotak, Martin; Romanova, Natasha; Clivaz, Claire; Ros, Salvador; Raciti, Marco;Publisher: HAL CCSDCountry: FranceProject: EC | DESIR (731081), EC | Locus Ludi (741520)
The DESIR project sets out to strengthen the sustainability of DARIAH and firmly establish it as a long-term leader and partner within arts and humanities communities. The project was designed to address six core infrastructural sustainability dimensions and one of these was dedicated to training and education, which is also one of the four pillars identified in the DARIAH Strategic Plan 2019-2026. In the framework of Work Package 7: Teaching, DESIR organised dedicated workshops in the six DARIAH accession countries (Czech Republic, Finland, Israel, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom) to introduce them to the DARIAH infrastructure and related services, and to develop methodological research skills. The topic of each workshop was decided by accession countries representatives according to the training needs of the national communities of researchers in the (Digital) Humanities. Training topics varied greatly: on the one hand, some workshops had the objective to introduce participants to specific methodological research skills; on the other hand, a different approach was used, and some events focused on the infrastructural role of training and education. The workshops organised in the context of Work Package 7: Teaching are listed below:• CZECH REPUBLIC: “A series of fall tutorials 2019 organized by LINDAT/CLARIAHCZ, tutorial #3 on TEI Training”, November 28, 2019, Prague;• FINLAND: “Reuse & sustainability: Open Science and social sciences and humanities research infrastructures”, 23 October 2019, Helsinki;• ISRAEL: “Introduction to Text Encoding and Digital Editions”, 24 October 2019, Haifa;• SPAIN: “DESIR Workshop: Digital Tools, Shared Data, and Research Dissemination”, 3 July 2019, Madrid;• SWITZERLAND: “Sharing the Experience: Workflows for the Digital Humanities”, 5-6 December 2019, Neuchâtel;• UNITED KINGDOM: “Research Software Engineering for Digital Humanities: Role of Training in Sustaining Expertise”, 9 December, London.
- Publication . Conference object . 2019Open Access Spanish; CastilianAuthors:Méndez Rodríguez, Eva María;Méndez Rodríguez, Eva María;
handle: 10016/28754
Country: SpainPonencia presentada en las Jornadas 20 Años del Consorcio Madroño: Las bibliotecas universitarias ante los retos del futuro, celebradas en Madrid del 20 al 21 de junio de 2019.
add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Preprint . Article . 2017 . Embargo End Date: 01 Jan 2017Open AccessAuthors:Collaboration, INDIGO-DataCloud; Salomoni, Davide; Campos, Isabel; Gaido, Luciano; de Lucas, Jesus Marco; Solagna, Peter; Gomes, Jorge; Matyska, Ludek; Fuhrman, Patrick; Hardt, Marcus; +54 moreCollaboration, INDIGO-DataCloud; Salomoni, Davide; Campos, Isabel; Gaido, Luciano; de Lucas, Jesus Marco; Solagna, Peter; Gomes, Jorge; Matyska, Ludek; Fuhrman, Patrick; Hardt, Marcus; Donvito, Giacinto; Dutka, Lukasz; Plociennik, Marcin; Barbera, Roberto; Blanquer, Ignacio; Ceccanti, Andrea; David, Mario; Duma, Cristina; López-García, Alvaro; Moltó, Germán; Orviz, Pablo; Sustr, Zdenek; Viljoen, Matthew; Aguilar, Fernando; Alves, Luis; Antonacci, Marica; Antonelli, Lucio Angelo; Bagnasco, Stefano; Bonvin, Alexandre M. J. J.; Bruno, Riccardo; Cetinic, Eva; Chen, Yin; Chiarello, Fabrizio; Costa, Alessandro; Pra, Stefano Dal; Davidovic, Davor; Dorigo, Alvise; Ertl, Benjamin; Fanzago, Federica; Fargetta, Marco; Fiore, Sandro; Gallozzi, Stefano; Kurkcuoglu, Zeynep; Lloret, Lara; Martins, Joao; Nuzzo, Alessandra; Nassisi, Paola; Palazzo, Cosimo; Pina, Joao; Sciacca, Eva; Segatta, Matteo; Sgaravatto, Massimo; Spiga, Daniele; Taneja, Sonia; Tangaro, Marco Antonio; Urbaniak, Michal; Vallero, Sara; Verlato, Marco; Wegh, Bas; Zaccolo, Valentina; Zambelli, Federico; Zangrando, Lisa; Zani, Stefano; Zok, Tomasz;Publisher: arXivProject: EC | INDIGO-DataCloud (653549)
This paper describes the achievements of the H2020 project INDIGO-DataCloud. The project has provided e-infrastructures with tools, applications and cloud framework enhancements to manage the demanding requirements of scientific communities, either locally or through enhanced interfaces. The middleware developed allows to federate hybrid resources, to easily write, port and run scientific applications to the cloud. In particular, we have extended existing PaaS (Platform as a Service) solutions, allowing public and private e-infrastructures, including those provided by EGI, EUDAT, and Helix Nebula, to integrate their existing services and make them available through AAI services compliant with GEANT interfederation policies, thus guaranteeing transparency and trust in the provisioning of such services. Our middleware facilitates the execution of applications using containers on Cloud and Grid based infrastructures, as well as on HPC clusters. Our developments are freely downloadable as open source components, and are already being integrated into many scientific applications. Comment: 39 pages, 15 figures.Version accepted in Journal of Grid Computing
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Conference object . Other literature type . Article . 2019Open Access EnglishAuthors:Marica Antonacci; Alberto Brigandì; Miguel Caballer; Eva Cetinic; Davor Davidović; Giacinto Donvito; Germán Moltó; Davide Salomoni;Marica Antonacci; Alberto Brigandì; Miguel Caballer; Eva Cetinic; Davor Davidović; Giacinto Donvito; Germán Moltó; Davide Salomoni;Publisher: EDP SciencesCountry: CroatiaProject: EC | INDIGO-DataCloud (653549)
In the framework of the H2020 INDIGO-DataCloud project, we have implemented an advanced solution for the automatic deployment of digital data repositories based on Invenio, the digital library framework developed by CERN. Exploiting cutting-edge technologies, such as Docker and Apache Mesos, and standard specifications to describe application architectures such as TOSCA, we are able to provide a service that simplifies the process of creating and managing repositories of various digital assets using cloud resources. An Invenio-based repository consists of a set of services (e.g. database, message queue, cache, workers and frontend) that need to be properly installed, configured and linked together. These operations, along with the provisioning of the resources and their monitoring and maintenance, can be challenging for individual researchers or small-to-moderate-sized research groups. To this purpose, the INDIGO-DataCloud platform provides advanced features for orchestrating the deployment of complex virtual infrastructures on distributed cloud environments: it is able to provision the required resources automatically over heterogeneous and/or hybrid cloud infrastructures and to configure them automatically ensuring dynamic elasticity and resilience. This approach has been successfully adapted to support the needs of the researchers and scholars in the domain of the Digital Arts and Humanities.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . 2020EnglishAuthors:Kristanti, Tanti; Romary, Laurent;Kristanti, Tanti; Romary, Laurent;Publisher: HAL CCSDCountry: France
International audience; This article presents an overview of approaches and results during our participation in the CLEF HIPE 2020 NERC-COARSE-LIT and EL-ONLY tasks for English and French. For these two tasks, we use two systems: 1) DeLFT, a Deep Learning framework for text processing; 2) entity-fishing, generic named entity recognition and disambiguation service deployed in the technical framework of INRIA.
- Publication . Article . Conference object . Other literature type . 2018Open Access EnglishAuthors:A. Respaldiza; Monica Wachowicz; A. Vázquez Hoehne;A. Respaldiza; Monica Wachowicz; A. Vázquez Hoehne;Publisher: Copernicus PublicationsCountry: Spain
Abstract. Cultural heritage is a complex and diverse concept, which brings together a wide domain of information. Resources linked to a cultural heritage site may consist of physical artefacts, books, works of art, pictures, historical maps, aerial photographs, archaeological surveys and 3D models. Moreover, all these resources are listed and described by a set of a variety of metadata specifications that allow their online search and consultation on the most basic characteristics of them. Some examples include Norma ISO 19115, Dublin Core, AAT, CDWA, CCO, DACS, MARC, MoReq, MODS, MuseumDat, TGN, SPECTRUM, VRA Core and Z39.50. Gateways are in place to fit in these metadata standards into those used in a SDI (ISO 19115 or INSPIRE), but substantial work still remains to be done for the complete incorporation of cultural heritage information. Therefore, the aim of this paper is to demonstrate how the complexity of cultural heritage resources can be dealt with by a visual exploration of their metadata within a 3D collaborative environment. The 3D collaborative environments are promising tools that represent the new frontier of our capacity of learning, understanding, communicating and transmitting culture.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Other literature type . Conference object . Project proposal . 2020Open Access EnglishAuthors:Toscano, Maurizio; Bocanegra Barbecho, Lidia; Ros, Salvador; Gonzalez-Blanco, Elena;Toscano, Maurizio; Bocanegra Barbecho, Lidia; Ros, Salvador; Gonzalez-Blanco, Elena;Publisher: ZenodoCountry: SpainProject: EC | POSTDATA (679528)
This poster has been awarded with the Best Poster Award at DARIAH2020 virtual annual event https://twitter.com/dariaheu/status/1327290958971609090?s=21 In order to provide the global community of scholars working in this field with a greater understanding of the current Spanish scenario, LINHD has recently promoted a research on the evolution of Digital Humanities in Spain in the last 25 years, a timeframe comparable with Unsworth first formulation of scholarly primitives. More than 1,000 records have been mapped, distributed as follow: 577 researchers; 368 projects; 88 resources; 9 post-graduate courses; and 8 specialised journals. Digital resources (i.e. repositories of documents, collections of artefacts, crowdsourcing platforms, dictionaries, databases, etc.), which are the object of this poster, have been produced, most of the time, with the aim to publish a service to improve the basic of day-to-day research workflow in the Humanities. Our initial objectives were: to classify and describe the digital resources mapped according with the classical and new scholarly primitives, in order to highlight presences, absence and recurring associations of these categories; To visualize the relationships between scholarly primitives and other dimensions in our data, like discipline and typology. to identify how the introduction of digital tools and methods has affected the basic functions of research in the Humanities in Spain over time. Data analysed is part of a larger dataset that can be downloaded at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3893546 The whole dataset has been extensively analysed in https://doi.org/10.3145/epi.2020.nov.01
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.
17 Research products, page 1 of 2
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- Publication . Other literature type . Article . 2018Open Access EnglishAuthors:Atherton, Christopher John; Barton, Thomas; Basney, Jim; Broeder, Daan; Costa, Alessandro; Daalen, Mirjam Van; Dyke, Stephanie; Elbers, Willem; Enell, Carl-Fredrik; Fasanelli, Enrico Maria Vincenzo; +30 moreAtherton, Christopher John; Barton, Thomas; Basney, Jim; Broeder, Daan; Costa, Alessandro; Daalen, Mirjam Van; Dyke, Stephanie; Elbers, Willem; Enell, Carl-Fredrik; Fasanelli, Enrico Maria Vincenzo; Fernandes, João; Florio, Licia; Gietz, Peter; Groep, David L.; Junker, Matthias Bernhard; Kanellopoulos, Christos; Kelsey, David; Kershaw, Philip; Knapic, Cristina; Kollegger, Thorsten; Koranda, Scott; Linden, Mikael; Marinic, Filip; Matyska, Ludek; Nyrönen, Tommi Henrik; Paetow, Stefan; Paglione, Laura A D; Parlati, Sandra; Phillips, Christopher; Prochazka, Michal; Rees, Nicholas; Short, Hannah; Stevanovic, Uros; Tartakovsky, Michael; Venekamp, Gerben; Vitez, Tom; Wartel, Romain; Whalen, Christopher; White, John; Zwölf, Carlo Maria;Country: GermanyProject: EC | GN4-2 (731122), EC | IS-ENES2 (312979), EC | IS-ENES (228203), EC | CALIPSOplus (730872), EC | CORBEL (654248), EC | AARC2 (730941), EC | EOSC-hub (777536), EC | ELIXIR-EXCELERATE (676559), NSF | Data Handling and Analysi... (1700765)
The authors also acknowledge the support and collaboration of many other colleagues in their respective institutes, research communities and IT Infrastructures, together with the funding received by these from many different sources. These include but are not limited to the following: (i) The Worldwide LHC Computing Grid (WLCG) project is a global collaboration of more than 170 computing centres in 43 countries, linking up national and international grid infrastructures. Funding is acknowledged from many national funding bodies and we acknowledge the support of several operational infrastructures including EGI, OSG and NDGF/NeIC. (ii) EGI acknowledges the funding and support received from the European Commission and the many National Grid Initiatives and other members. EOSC-hub receives funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 777536. (iii) The work leading to these results has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No. 730941 (AARC2). (iv) Work on the development of ESGF's identity management system has been supported by The UK Natural Environment Research Council and funding from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration through projects IS-ENES (grant agreement no 228203) and IS-ENES2 (grant agreement no 312979). (v) Ludek Matyska and Michal Prochazka acknowledge funding from the RI ELIXIR CZ project funded by MEYS Czech Republic No. LM2015047. (vi) Scott Koranda acknowledges support provided by the United States National Science Foundation under Grant No. PHY-1700765. (vii) GÉANT Association on behalf of the GN4 Phase 2 project (GN4-2).The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No. 731122(GN4-2). (viii) ELIXIR acknowledges support from Research Infrastructure programme of Horizon 2020 grant No 676559 EXCELERATE. (ix) CORBEL life science cluster acknowledges support from Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 654248. (x) Mirjam van Daalen acknowledges that the research leading to this result has been supported by the project CALIPSOplus under the Grant Agreement 730872 from the EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation HORIZON 2020. (xi) EISCAT is an international association supported by research organisations in China (CRIRP), Finland (SA), Japan (NIPR), Norway (NFR), Sweden (VR), and the United Kingdom (NERC). This white-paper expresses common requirements of Research Communities seeking to leverage Identity Federation for Authentication and Authorisation. Recommendations are made to Stakeholders to guide the future evolution of Federated Identity Management in a direction that better satisfies research use cases. The authors represent research communities, Research Services, Infrastructures, Identity Federations and Interfederations, with a joint motivation to ease collaboration for distributed researchers. The content has been edited collaboratively by the Federated Identity Management for Research (FIM4R) Community, with input sought at conferences and meetings in Europe, Asia and North America.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . Conference object . 2014Open AccessAuthors:Duccio Troiano; Andrés García Morro; Alessandro Merlo; Eduardo Vendrell Vidal;Duccio Troiano; Andrés García Morro; Alessandro Merlo; Eduardo Vendrell Vidal;Publisher: SpringerCountry: Italy
Despite extensive research having been conducted on the subject, the problem of three-dimensional information systems for historical cities is actually still unresolved. In addition, commercially available software seems to be increasingly aiming at a quick development of unspecific urban settings, rather than at a metrically and perceptively faithful representation of reality. In this scenario, the SIUR 3D software (Sistema Informativo URbano tridimensionale) is based on a management structure that links an interactive, photorealistic and metrically reliable model of a city with a qualitative database of the historical, archaeological and material scope of an architectural part. Such application uses the Unity 3D game engine for geometrical models management and is equipped for online data sharing.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Report . 2019EnglishAuthors:Szprot, Jakub; Arpagaus, Brigitte; Ciula, Arianna; Clivaz, Claire; Gabay, Simon; Honegger, Matthieu; Hughes, Lorna; Immenhauser, Beat; Jakeman, Neil; Lhotak, Martin; +8 moreSzprot, Jakub; Arpagaus, Brigitte; Ciula, Arianna; Clivaz, Claire; Gabay, Simon; Honegger, Matthieu; Hughes, Lorna; Immenhauser, Beat; Jakeman, Neil; Lhotak, Martin; Romanova, Natasha; Ros, Salvador; Schulthess, Sara; Tahko, Tuuli; Tolonen, Mikko; Erdinast Vulcan, Daphna; Willa, Pierre; Zehavi, Ora;Publisher: HAL CCSDCountry: FranceProject: EC | DESIR (731081)
This report provides information about activities and progress towards establishing DARIAH membership in six countries: the Czech Republic, Finland, Israel, Spain, Switzerland, and the UK, which took place between July and December 2019. Previous activities were described in detail in the D3.2 - Regularly Monitor Country-Specific Progress in Enabling New DARIAH Membership. During the project lifetime, the Czech Republic joined DARIAH ERIC; in other countries, collaboration with DARIAH has been greatly strengthened and significant progress regarding DARIAH membership has been achieved. The report also outlines the next steps in the accession processes, building on the results of the DESIR project.
- Publication . Report . 2019EnglishAuthors:Tahko, Tuuli; Zehavi, Ora; Lhotak, Martin; Romanova, Natasha; Clivaz, Claire; Ros, Salvador; Raciti, Marco;Tahko, Tuuli; Zehavi, Ora; Lhotak, Martin; Romanova, Natasha; Clivaz, Claire; Ros, Salvador; Raciti, Marco;Publisher: HAL CCSDCountry: FranceProject: EC | DESIR (731081), EC | Locus Ludi (741520)
The DESIR project sets out to strengthen the sustainability of DARIAH and firmly establish it as a long-term leader and partner within arts and humanities communities. The project was designed to address six core infrastructural sustainability dimensions and one of these was dedicated to training and education, which is also one of the four pillars identified in the DARIAH Strategic Plan 2019-2026. In the framework of Work Package 7: Teaching, DESIR organised dedicated workshops in the six DARIAH accession countries (Czech Republic, Finland, Israel, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom) to introduce them to the DARIAH infrastructure and related services, and to develop methodological research skills. The topic of each workshop was decided by accession countries representatives according to the training needs of the national communities of researchers in the (Digital) Humanities. Training topics varied greatly: on the one hand, some workshops had the objective to introduce participants to specific methodological research skills; on the other hand, a different approach was used, and some events focused on the infrastructural role of training and education. The workshops organised in the context of Work Package 7: Teaching are listed below:• CZECH REPUBLIC: “A series of fall tutorials 2019 organized by LINDAT/CLARIAHCZ, tutorial #3 on TEI Training”, November 28, 2019, Prague;• FINLAND: “Reuse & sustainability: Open Science and social sciences and humanities research infrastructures”, 23 October 2019, Helsinki;• ISRAEL: “Introduction to Text Encoding and Digital Editions”, 24 October 2019, Haifa;• SPAIN: “DESIR Workshop: Digital Tools, Shared Data, and Research Dissemination”, 3 July 2019, Madrid;• SWITZERLAND: “Sharing the Experience: Workflows for the Digital Humanities”, 5-6 December 2019, Neuchâtel;• UNITED KINGDOM: “Research Software Engineering for Digital Humanities: Role of Training in Sustaining Expertise”, 9 December, London.
- Publication . Conference object . 2019Open Access Spanish; CastilianAuthors:Méndez Rodríguez, Eva María;Méndez Rodríguez, Eva María;
handle: 10016/28754
Country: SpainPonencia presentada en las Jornadas 20 Años del Consorcio Madroño: Las bibliotecas universitarias ante los retos del futuro, celebradas en Madrid del 20 al 21 de junio de 2019.
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You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Preprint . Article . 2017 . Embargo End Date: 01 Jan 2017Open AccessAuthors:Collaboration, INDIGO-DataCloud; Salomoni, Davide; Campos, Isabel; Gaido, Luciano; de Lucas, Jesus Marco; Solagna, Peter; Gomes, Jorge; Matyska, Ludek; Fuhrman, Patrick; Hardt, Marcus; +54 moreCollaboration, INDIGO-DataCloud; Salomoni, Davide; Campos, Isabel; Gaido, Luciano; de Lucas, Jesus Marco; Solagna, Peter; Gomes, Jorge; Matyska, Ludek; Fuhrman, Patrick; Hardt, Marcus; Donvito, Giacinto; Dutka, Lukasz; Plociennik, Marcin; Barbera, Roberto; Blanquer, Ignacio; Ceccanti, Andrea; David, Mario; Duma, Cristina; López-García, Alvaro; Moltó, Germán; Orviz, Pablo; Sustr, Zdenek; Viljoen, Matthew; Aguilar, Fernando; Alves, Luis; Antonacci, Marica; Antonelli, Lucio Angelo; Bagnasco, Stefano; Bonvin, Alexandre M. J. J.; Bruno, Riccardo; Cetinic, Eva; Chen, Yin; Chiarello, Fabrizio; Costa, Alessandro; Pra, Stefano Dal; Davidovic, Davor; Dorigo, Alvise; Ertl, Benjamin; Fanzago, Federica; Fargetta, Marco; Fiore, Sandro; Gallozzi, Stefano; Kurkcuoglu, Zeynep; Lloret, Lara; Martins, Joao; Nuzzo, Alessandra; Nassisi, Paola; Palazzo, Cosimo; Pina, Joao; Sciacca, Eva; Segatta, Matteo; Sgaravatto, Massimo; Spiga, Daniele; Taneja, Sonia; Tangaro, Marco Antonio; Urbaniak, Michal; Vallero, Sara; Verlato, Marco; Wegh, Bas; Zaccolo, Valentina; Zambelli, Federico; Zangrando, Lisa; Zani, Stefano; Zok, Tomasz;Publisher: arXivProject: EC | INDIGO-DataCloud (653549)
This paper describes the achievements of the H2020 project INDIGO-DataCloud. The project has provided e-infrastructures with tools, applications and cloud framework enhancements to manage the demanding requirements of scientific communities, either locally or through enhanced interfaces. The middleware developed allows to federate hybrid resources, to easily write, port and run scientific applications to the cloud. In particular, we have extended existing PaaS (Platform as a Service) solutions, allowing public and private e-infrastructures, including those provided by EGI, EUDAT, and Helix Nebula, to integrate their existing services and make them available through AAI services compliant with GEANT interfederation policies, thus guaranteeing transparency and trust in the provisioning of such services. Our middleware facilitates the execution of applications using containers on Cloud and Grid based infrastructures, as well as on HPC clusters. Our developments are freely downloadable as open source components, and are already being integrated into many scientific applications. Comment: 39 pages, 15 figures.Version accepted in Journal of Grid Computing
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Conference object . Other literature type . Article . 2019Open Access EnglishAuthors:Marica Antonacci; Alberto Brigandì; Miguel Caballer; Eva Cetinic; Davor Davidović; Giacinto Donvito; Germán Moltó; Davide Salomoni;Marica Antonacci; Alberto Brigandì; Miguel Caballer; Eva Cetinic; Davor Davidović; Giacinto Donvito; Germán Moltó; Davide Salomoni;Publisher: EDP SciencesCountry: CroatiaProject: EC | INDIGO-DataCloud (653549)
In the framework of the H2020 INDIGO-DataCloud project, we have implemented an advanced solution for the automatic deployment of digital data repositories based on Invenio, the digital library framework developed by CERN. Exploiting cutting-edge technologies, such as Docker and Apache Mesos, and standard specifications to describe application architectures such as TOSCA, we are able to provide a service that simplifies the process of creating and managing repositories of various digital assets using cloud resources. An Invenio-based repository consists of a set of services (e.g. database, message queue, cache, workers and frontend) that need to be properly installed, configured and linked together. These operations, along with the provisioning of the resources and their monitoring and maintenance, can be challenging for individual researchers or small-to-moderate-sized research groups. To this purpose, the INDIGO-DataCloud platform provides advanced features for orchestrating the deployment of complex virtual infrastructures on distributed cloud environments: it is able to provision the required resources automatically over heterogeneous and/or hybrid cloud infrastructures and to configure them automatically ensuring dynamic elasticity and resilience. This approach has been successfully adapted to support the needs of the researchers and scholars in the domain of the Digital Arts and Humanities.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . 2020EnglishAuthors:Kristanti, Tanti; Romary, Laurent;Kristanti, Tanti; Romary, Laurent;Publisher: HAL CCSDCountry: France
International audience; This article presents an overview of approaches and results during our participation in the CLEF HIPE 2020 NERC-COARSE-LIT and EL-ONLY tasks for English and French. For these two tasks, we use two systems: 1) DeLFT, a Deep Learning framework for text processing; 2) entity-fishing, generic named entity recognition and disambiguation service deployed in the technical framework of INRIA.
- Publication . Article . Conference object . Other literature type . 2018Open Access EnglishAuthors:A. Respaldiza; Monica Wachowicz; A. Vázquez Hoehne;A. Respaldiza; Monica Wachowicz; A. Vázquez Hoehne;Publisher: Copernicus PublicationsCountry: Spain
Abstract. Cultural heritage is a complex and diverse concept, which brings together a wide domain of information. Resources linked to a cultural heritage site may consist of physical artefacts, books, works of art, pictures, historical maps, aerial photographs, archaeological surveys and 3D models. Moreover, all these resources are listed and described by a set of a variety of metadata specifications that allow their online search and consultation on the most basic characteristics of them. Some examples include Norma ISO 19115, Dublin Core, AAT, CDWA, CCO, DACS, MARC, MoReq, MODS, MuseumDat, TGN, SPECTRUM, VRA Core and Z39.50. Gateways are in place to fit in these metadata standards into those used in a SDI (ISO 19115 or INSPIRE), but substantial work still remains to be done for the complete incorporation of cultural heritage information. Therefore, the aim of this paper is to demonstrate how the complexity of cultural heritage resources can be dealt with by a visual exploration of their metadata within a 3D collaborative environment. The 3D collaborative environments are promising tools that represent the new frontier of our capacity of learning, understanding, communicating and transmitting culture.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Other literature type . Conference object . Project proposal . 2020Open Access EnglishAuthors:Toscano, Maurizio; Bocanegra Barbecho, Lidia; Ros, Salvador; Gonzalez-Blanco, Elena;Toscano, Maurizio; Bocanegra Barbecho, Lidia; Ros, Salvador; Gonzalez-Blanco, Elena;Publisher: ZenodoCountry: SpainProject: EC | POSTDATA (679528)
This poster has been awarded with the Best Poster Award at DARIAH2020 virtual annual event https://twitter.com/dariaheu/status/1327290958971609090?s=21 In order to provide the global community of scholars working in this field with a greater understanding of the current Spanish scenario, LINHD has recently promoted a research on the evolution of Digital Humanities in Spain in the last 25 years, a timeframe comparable with Unsworth first formulation of scholarly primitives. More than 1,000 records have been mapped, distributed as follow: 577 researchers; 368 projects; 88 resources; 9 post-graduate courses; and 8 specialised journals. Digital resources (i.e. repositories of documents, collections of artefacts, crowdsourcing platforms, dictionaries, databases, etc.), which are the object of this poster, have been produced, most of the time, with the aim to publish a service to improve the basic of day-to-day research workflow in the Humanities. Our initial objectives were: to classify and describe the digital resources mapped according with the classical and new scholarly primitives, in order to highlight presences, absence and recurring associations of these categories; To visualize the relationships between scholarly primitives and other dimensions in our data, like discipline and typology. to identify how the introduction of digital tools and methods has affected the basic functions of research in the Humanities in Spain over time. Data analysed is part of a larger dataset that can be downloaded at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3893546 The whole dataset has been extensively analysed in https://doi.org/10.3145/epi.2020.nov.01
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.