Abstract | ||
---|---|---|
Workflows have emerged as a paradigm for representing and managing complex distributed computations and are used to accelerate the pace of scientific progress. A recent National Science Foundation workshop brought together domain, computer, and social scientists to discuss requirements of future scientific applications and the challenges they present to current workflow technologies. |
Year | DOI | Venue |
---|---|---|
2007 | 10.1109/MC.2007.421 | IEEE Computer |
Keywords | DocType | Volume |
scientific progress,recent National Science Foundation,Scientific Workflows,future scientific application,social scientist,current workflow technology | Journal | 40 |
Issue | ISSN | Citations |
12 | 0018-9162 | 241 |
PageRank | References | Authors |
14.33 | 2 | 10 |
Name | Order | Citations | PageRank |
---|---|---|---|
Yolanda Gil | 1 | 4491 | 413.53 |
Ewa Deelman | 2 | 5948 | 420.48 |
Mark Ellisman | 3 | 354 | 26.76 |
Thomas Fahringer | 4 | 2847 | 254.09 |
Geoffrey Fox | 5 | 4070 | 575.38 |
Dennis Gannon | 6 | 2514 | 330.26 |
Carole Goble | 7 | 7252 | 788.90 |
Miron Livny | 8 | 10316 | 2186.99 |
luc moreau | 9 | 2540 | 184.04 |
Jim Myers | 10 | 787 | 39.05 |