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Citizen Science and the Modern Web

<!--HTML--><p align="justify"> Beginning as a research project to help scientists communicate, the Web has transformed into a ubiquitous medium. As the sciences continue to transform, new techniques are needed to analyze the vast amounts of data being produced by large experime...

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Autor principal: Kapadia, Amit
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1648893
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author Kapadia, Amit
author_facet Kapadia, Amit
author_sort Kapadia, Amit
collection CERN
description <!--HTML--><p align="justify"> Beginning as a research project to help scientists communicate, the Web has transformed into a ubiquitous medium. As the sciences continue to transform, new techniques are needed to analyze the vast amounts of data being produced by large experiments. The advent of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey increased throughput of astronomical data, giving rise to Citizen Science projects such as Galaxy Zoo. The Web is no longer exclusively used by researchers, but rather, a place where anyone can share information, or even, partake in citizen science projects. </p><p align="justify"> As the Web continues to evolve, new and open technologies enable web applications to become more sophisticated. Scientific toolsets may now target the Web as a platform, opening an application to a wider audience, and potentially citizen scientists. With the latest browser technologies, scientific data may be consumed and visualized, opening the browser as a new platform for scientific analysis. </p>
id cern-1648893
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2014
record_format invenio
spelling cern-16488932022-11-02T22:30:05Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1648893engKapadia, AmitCitizen Science and the Modern WebCitizen Science and the Modern WebComputing Seminar<!--HTML--><p align="justify"> Beginning as a research project to help scientists communicate, the Web has transformed into a ubiquitous medium. As the sciences continue to transform, new techniques are needed to analyze the vast amounts of data being produced by large experiments. The advent of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey increased throughput of astronomical data, giving rise to Citizen Science projects such as Galaxy Zoo. The Web is no longer exclusively used by researchers, but rather, a place where anyone can share information, or even, partake in citizen science projects. </p><p align="justify"> As the Web continues to evolve, new and open technologies enable web applications to become more sophisticated. Scientific toolsets may now target the Web as a platform, opening an application to a wider audience, and potentially citizen scientists. With the latest browser technologies, scientific data may be consumed and visualized, opening the browser as a new platform for scientific analysis. </p>oai:cds.cern.ch:16488932014
spellingShingle Computing Seminar
Kapadia, Amit
Citizen Science and the Modern Web
title Citizen Science and the Modern Web
title_full Citizen Science and the Modern Web
title_fullStr Citizen Science and the Modern Web
title_full_unstemmed Citizen Science and the Modern Web
title_short Citizen Science and the Modern Web
title_sort citizen science and the modern web
topic Computing Seminar
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1648893
work_keys_str_mv AT kapadiaamit citizenscienceandthemodernweb