Tags
Taverna: lessons in creating a workflow environment for the life sciences
by:
Tom Oinn ,
Mark Greenwood ,
Matthew Addis ,
M. Nedim Alpdemir ,
Justin Ferris ,
Kevin Glover ,
Carole Goble ,
Antoon Goderis ,
Duncan Hull ,
Darren Marvin ,
Peter Li ,
Phillip Lord ,
Matthew R. Pocock ,
Martin Senger ,
Robert Stevens ,
Anil Wipat ,
Chris Wroe
RIS
Export as RIS which can be imported into most citation managers
BibTeX
Export as BibTeX which can be imported into most citation/bibliography managers
PDF
Export formatted citations as PDF
RTF
Export formatted citations as RTF which can be imported into most word processors
Delicious
Export in format suitable for direct import into delicious.com. (Setup a permanent sync to delicious)
Formatted Text
Export formatted citations as plain text
To insert individual citation into a bibliography in a word-processor,
select your preferred citation style below and drag-and-drop it into the document.
Concurr. Comput. : Pract. Exper. , Vol. 18, No. 10. (August 2006), pp. 1067-1100, doi:10.1002/cpe.v18:10 Key: citeulike:1041443
Posts
Citation
Find Similar
Formatted Citation
Show HTML
Likes
(beta)
This copy of the article hasn't been liked by anyone yet.
Abstract
Life sciences research is based on individuals, often with diverse skills, assembled into research groups. These groups use their specialist expertise to address scientific problems. The in silico experiments undertaken by these research groups can be represented as workflows involving the co-ordinated use of analysis programs and information repositories that may be globally distributed. With regards to Grid computing, the requirements relate to the sharing of analysis and information resources rather than sharing computational power. The myGrid project has developed the Taverna Workbench for the composition and execution of workflows for the life sciences community. This experience paper describes lessons learnt during the development of Taverna. A common theme is the importance of understanding how workflows fit into the scientists' experimental context. The lessons reflect an evolving understanding of life scientists' requirements on a workflow environment, which is relevant to other areas of data intensive and exploratory science. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
dpandiar's tags for this article
Citations (CiTO)
No CiTO relationships defined
There are no reviews of this article
By clicking "OK" you acknowledge that you have the right to distribute this file.
CiteULike organises scholarly (or academic) papers or literature and provides bibliographic
(which means it makes bibliographies) for universities and higher education establishments.
It helps undergraduates and postgraduates. People studying for PhDs or in postdoctoral (postdoc) positions.
The service is similar in scope to EndNote or RefWorks or any other reference manager
like BibTeX, but it is a social bookmarking service for scientists and humanities researchers.