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Earth Observation Data Cooperation and Sharing through Geospatial Cyberinfrastructure

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Title: Earth Observation Data Cooperation and Sharing through Geospatial Cyberinfrastructure


1
Earth Observation Data Cooperation and Sharing
through Geospatial Cyberinfrastructure
  • Liping Di, Ph.D.
  • Professor and Director
  • Center for Spatial Information Science and
    Systems (CSISS)
  • George Mason University (GMU)
  • 4400 University Drive, MSN 6E1
  • Fairfax, VA 22030
  • ldi_at_gmu.edu
  • http//csiss.gmu.edu

2
Introduction
  • Human beings depend on suitable
    climate/environment and services provided by
    ecosystems for food, water, shelter, and survival
  • humanitys increasingly extensive socioeconomic
    activities have significantly altered global
    climate and life-sustaining ecosystems.
  • The Asia-Pacific region, in particular, is
    critical to studying and understanding the human
    impact on climate, biodiversity and ecosystems
    due to its large and diverse demography,
    geographic size, and fast growing economies and
    population.
  • Studies of global climate and environmental
    change are data intensive and require capacity to
    acquire and process huge volumes of Earth science
    data from diverse sources.
  • Earth science data with large spatial and
    frequent temporal coverages

Page 2
3
Cooperation and sharing of Earth science resources
  • The key method for acquiring Earth science data
    is the satellite remote sensing
  • Many countries have engaged in satellite-based
    Earth observations
  • Highly complementary spatially, temporally, or
    spectrally.
  • Processed and archived at institutions around the
    world.
  • in situ data collection, knowledge of local
    socioeconomic and physical conditions, and field
    validation are essential for understanding the
    underlying mechanisms of ecosystem changes,
    predicting regional and global impacts, and
    mitigating consequences of the changes.
  • International cooperation and sharing of data,
    information, knowledge, sensors and computing
    facilities, human resources and Earth science
    wisdom are essential elements to conduct needed
    studies.

4
Geospatial Cyberinfrastructure
  • Cyberinfrastructure (CI) an coordinated cyber
    environment that supports advanced data
    acquisition, data storage, data management, data
    integration, data mining, data visualization and
    other computing and information processing
    services and facilities distributed over the
    Internet beyond the scope of a single
    institution.
  • cyberinfrastructure is a technological and
    sociological solution to the problem of
    efficiently sharing data, information, sensors,
    models, computing resources with the goal of
    enabling derivation of novel scientific theories
    and knowledge.
  • Geospatial CI-The cyberinfrastructure in Earth
    science domain.
  • Essential and most effective way for Earth
    observation data cooperation and sharing

5
GMU CSISS
  • Established in January 2006 as one of GMU
    university research centers chartered by the
    provost.
  • It originated from the Laboratory for Advanced
    Information Technology and Standards (LAITS)
    established in November 2000.
  • Missions
  • Developing technologies and standards for the
    implementation of national and international
    spatial cyberinfrastructures (e.g., NSDI, GSDI,
    Digital Earth, EOSDIS, GEOSS)
  • Developing advanced information technologies and
    systems for automating the processes from
    geospatial data to information and knowledge.
  • Leading the development of federal, national, and
    international standards in geographic information
    science and remote sensing.
  • Developing new remote sensing algorithms for
    Earth system science research and applications.
  • Goal
  • Make geospatial information the mainstream
    information so that not only just experts but
    also everyone can easily obtain and use it.
  • CSISS website http//www.csiss.gmu.edu

Page 5
6
CSISS Efforts on CI
  • National and international standards on
    geographic Information
  • Core geospatial cyberinfrastructure technology
  • Data discovery, access, and integration
  • Service discovery and execution
  • Service chaining, geospatial processing modeling,
    workflows
  • Resource management, metadata and provenance
  • Knowledge and virtual organization
  • Earth observation sensor web
  • Coordinate and manage distributed sensor
    resources
  • Construction and operation of geospatial CI
  • Cyberinfrastructure-based Earth system/remote
    sensing research

7
GeoBrain CI
  • GeoBrain is a Geospatial CI
  • Funded by NASA REASoN program
  • Developed and operated by a project team led by
    CSISS at George Mason University.
  • The GeoBrain CI
  • provides innovative methods for publishing,
    accessing, visualizing, and analyzing geospatial
    data and for building and sharing geospatial
    knowledge
  • establishes an unique online data-intensive
    learning and research environment freely
    available to users all over the world
  • makes peta-bytes of NASA EOS data and information
    in both on-line data pools and near-line
    storages, easily accessible to and usable by
    higher-education users as if they have such
    resources locally.

8
GeoBrain Capabilities (1)
  • An open customizable geospatial data source.
  • Work with all HDF-EOS data in EOSDIS online data
    storages.
  • Provide interoperable, personalized, on-demand
    data access and services (IPODAS) to the data
    automatically
  • Users will obtain data that exactly match their
    requirements in term of format, projection,
    spatial/temporal coverage and resolutions.
  • OGC WCS, WMS, and CSW interfaces are provided.
  • An on-line data analysis system.
  • Several hundred geospatial web services are
    provided on-line for analyzing any of the EOSDIS
    online data.
  • Services are developed in-house with OGC
    standards or converted from more than 200 GRASS
    GIS functions.

9
GeoBrain Capabilities (2)
  • An on-line platform for geospatial-processing
    modeling.
  • A regular user can construct a geospatial
    processing model conceptually to tell step by
    step how a type of geospatial products can be
    generated from lower-level inputs.
  • The model will be converted automatically to
    executable web-service workflow once the user
    specifies geospatial coverage and time of the
    model output and generate the output for users.
  • After proper review, the model is kept in the
    system as a type of products the system can offer
    (virtual geospatial products).
  • Automatic composition of the processing models
    with support of ontology and type matches are
    prototyped (OWL-S based).
  • An platform for sharing geospatial knowledge
  • The processing models at concept level represent
    the geospatial knowledge.
  • The models should be sharable with other systems.
  • All these capabilities of GeoBrain form the
    common cyberinfrastructure for conducting
    data-intensive Earth science research

10
GeoBrain Operation
  • Operational since 2005
  • Data resources
  • All NASA EOSDIS data
  • USGS Landsat archives
  • NOAA data All NOAA satellites and climate data
    archived in CLASS system
  • Total data volumes over 6 Petabytes
  • Additional data resources of other space agencies
    will become accessible to GeoBrain through the
    CEOS WGISS Integrated Catalog (CWIC) project that
    CSISS is working on.
  • User statistics
  • Currently about 2400 unique users/month using the
    GeoBrain services.

11
CI-Based Research and Education
  • Currently, scientists conducting data-intensive
    global change studies require significant
    computer resources and data management expertise
    locally.
  • Only a few scientists have such resources now,
    and most are located in the developed countries.
  • GeoBrain catalyzes the paradigm change on how
    data-intensive global change research will be
    conducted by providing such resources virtually
    to every scientist through the online platform.
  • This paradigm change will transform
    data-intensive global change research from a
    local, isolated, individual scientist-based
    activity to CI-supported collaborative e-science
    endeavors.
  • We are currently working on building a set of
    application and decision support systems using
    the common infrastructure and capabilities
    provided by GeoBrain
  • serve as exemplars on how valid scientific
    research can be conducted on GeoBrain quickly and
    effectively

12
US-China Cooperation on CI-based Geospatial
Research and Education (1)
  • Demonstration Study on Advancing Global Change
    Research Approaches Based on Inter-Agency
    Collaboration and Data Infrastructure of GENESI
    and GeoBrain
  • Funded by Asia-Pacific Network (APN) for Global
    Change Studies
  • PI- Prof. Guoqing Li, The Center for Earth
    Observation and Digital Earth, Chinese Academy of
    Sciences
  • Scientists from 6 countries participate in the
    project
  • To demonstrate the advantage of CI-based
    scientific research
  • Case study areas Tibet and Southeast Asia
  • GeoBrain is one of two CIs used in the project
    as the data and computing sources

13
US-China Cooperation on CI-based Geospatial
Research and Education (2)
  • Enhancing Knowledgeable Agricultural Decision
    Support in Global Perspectives--Collaborative
    Partnership in Agro-geoinformatics Education and
    Research Exchange
  • Funded by US Department of Agriculture (USDA)
  • US participations- GMU/CSISS (PI), USDA/NASS
  • Chinese Partners
  • College of Agriculture, Shanghai JiaoTong
    University
  • China National Engineering Research Center for
    Information Technology in Agriculture
  • Institute of Agricultural Resources and Regional
    Planning, Chinese Academy of Agricultural
    Sciences
  • Division of Agricultural Remote Sensing at
    Chinese Academy of Agricultural Engineering
  • The State Key Laboratory of Information
    Engineering in Survey, Mapping, and Remote
    Sensing, Wuhan University

14
Discussion and Conclusion
  • Cooperation on Earth observations and sharing the
    resulting data are very important for Earth
    science research at regional to global scale.
  • Geospatial Cyberinfrastructure is the essential
    infrastructure for sharing and cooperation.
  • The cooperation and sharing are already fruitful
  • Current data flow is mostly from U.S. to China
  • Hope that more data flow from China to U.S.
  • China has many Earth observation satellites on
    orbit now
  • E.g., environmental satellite series,
    disaster-reduction satellite series
  • Those data are useful to scientists worldwide
  • Open data access policy
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