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Cyberenvironments are technologies that provide an easy-to-use interface to local and shared instruments, sensor arrays, data stores and data sets, computational systems, networks, scientific and engineering applications, data analysis and visualization tools and services, and collaboration capabilities, all within a secure framework. To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
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A sensor array is a set of several sensors that an information gathering device uses to gather information (usually directional in nature) that cannot be gathered from a single source for a central processing unit. ...
In statistics, a data set is a set of data consisting of: a list of research subjects and the data vector associated with each. ...
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Data analysis is the act of transforming data with the aim of extracting useful information and facilitating conclusions. ...
Cyberenvironments help researchers organize and coordinate the appropriate subset of global resources available on a given problem and add capabilities that enhance said researchers’ abilities to manage complex projects and automate processes within and across projects and disciplines as well as to collaborate effectively with colleagues near and far. Cyberenvironments are tailored to allow researchers and educators to interact with the cyberinfrastructure using concepts and approaches familiar to their specific discipline. They act as a disciplinary lens over the cyberinfrastructure to focus resources and capabilities on the solution of a specific problem. Cyberenvironments are built on technologies such as portals, workflow engines, and semantic data and service descriptions to enable continuing addition of new cyberapplications, cybertools, and cyberservices as researchers’ needs evolve and scientific understanding grows. The term cyberinfrastructure was used by a United States National Science Foundation (NSF) blue-ribbon committee in 2003 in response to the question: how can NSF, as the nations premier agency funding basic research, remove existing barriers to the rapid evolution of high performance computing, making it truly usable...
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