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Eco-informatics and natural resource management
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Source dg.o; Vol. 151 archive
Proceedings of the 2006 international conference on Digital government research table of contents
San Diego, California
POSTER SESSION: Posters table of contents
Pages: 381 - 382  
Year of Publication: 2006
Authors
Judith Bayard Cushing  The Evergreen State College, Olympia WA
Tyrone Wilson  National Biological Information Infrastructure, Reston, VA
Alan Borning  University of Washington
Lois Delcambre  Portland State University
Geoff Bowker  Santa Clara University
Mike Frame  USGS/NBII
John Schnase  NASA
William Sonntag  EPA
Janos Fulop  Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Carol Hert  University of Washington-Tacoma
Eduard Hovy  University of Southern California
Julia Jones  Oregon State University
Eric Landis  Natural Resources Information Management
Charles Schweik  University of Massachusetts-Amherst
Lawrence Brandt  National Science Foundation
Valerie Gregg  National Science Foundation
Sylvia Spengler  National Science Foundation
Sponsor
NSF : National Science Foundation
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

This project highlight reports on the 2004 workshop [1], as well as follow-up activities in 2005 and 2006, regarding how informatics tools can help manage natural resources and decide policy. The workshop was sponsored jointly by sponsored by the NSF, NBII, NASA, and EPA, and attended by practitioners from government and non-government agencies, and university researchers from the computer, social, and ecological sciences.The workshop presented the significant information technology (IT) problems that resource managers face when integrating ecological or environmental information to make decisions. These IT problems fall into five categories: data presentation, data gaps, tools, indicators, and policy making and implementation. To alleviate such problems, we recommend informatics research in four IT areas, as defined in this abstract and our final report: modeling and simulation, data quality, information integration and ontologies, and social and human aspects. Additionally, we recommend that funding agencies provide infrastructure and some changes in funding habits to assure cycles of innovation in the domain were addressed.Follow-on activities to the workshop subsequent to dg.o 2005 included: an invited talk presenting workshop results at DILS 2005, publication of the workshop final report by the NBII [1], and a poster at the NBII All Hands Meeting (Oct. 2005). We also expect a special issue of the JIIS to appear in 2006 that addresses some of these questions. As we go to press, no solicitation by funding agencies has as yet been published, but various NASA and NBII, and NSF cyber-infrastructure and DG research efforts now underway address the above issues..


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
The workshop website includes all presentations, the final report, and participants http://www.evergreen.edu/bdei.
 
2

Collaborative Colleagues:
Judith Bayard Cushing: colleagues
Tyrone Wilson: colleagues
Alan Borning: colleagues
Lois Delcambre: colleagues
Geoff Bowker: colleagues
Mike Frame: colleagues
John Schnase: colleagues
William Sonntag: colleagues
Janos Fulop: colleagues
Carol Hert: colleagues
Eduard Hovy: colleagues
Julia Jones: colleagues
Eric Landis: colleagues
Charles Schweik: colleagues
Lawrence Brandt: colleagues
Valerie Gregg: colleagues
Sylvia Spengler: colleagues