Document the provenance of the results
Timeline
SubTasks
From Geoscience Paper of the Future
    TypeM
    low
    ProgressM
    40%
    Start dateM
    7th Mar 2015
    Target dateM
    4th Apr 2015
    Participants
    Not defined!
    Expertise
    open science
    Legend: M Mandatory | States: Not defined, Valid, Inconsistent with parent
    (Suggested Readings)
    Line 17: Line 17:
     
    === Suggested Readings ===
     
    === Suggested Readings ===
      
    * [ "A Primer for the PROV Provenance Model."] Yolanda Gil, Simon Miles, Khalid Belhajjame, Helena Deus, Daniel Garijo, Graham Klyne, Paolo Missier, Stian Soiland-Reyes, and Stephan Zednik.  Published as a W3C Working Group Note on 30 April 2013. Available from [http://www.w3.org/TR/prov-primer/ here].
    +
    * [http://www.w3.org/TR/prov-primer/ "A Primer for the PROV Provenance Model."] Yolanda Gil, Simon Miles, Khalid Belhajjame, Helena Deus, Daniel Garijo, Graham Klyne, Paolo Missier, Stian Soiland-Reyes, and Stephan Zednik.  Published as a W3C Working Group Note on 30 April 2013.  
     
    ** ''A brief and practical introduction to the PROV standard for provenance, showing examples of how to represent the provenance record in RDF through a simple notation called Turtle''
     
    ** ''A brief and practical introduction to the PROV standard for provenance, showing examples of how to represent the provenance record in RDF through a simple notation called Turtle''
      
    * http://www.iemss.org/sites/iemss2014/papers/iemss2014_submission_384.pdf ["Intelligent Workflow Systems and Provenance-Aware Software."] Gil, Y. In Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress on Environmental Modeling and Software, San Diego, CA, 2014.   
    +
    * [http://www.iemss.org/sites/iemss2014/papers/iemss2014_submission_384.pdf "Intelligent Workflow Systems and Provenance-Aware Software."] Gil, Y. In Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress on Environmental Modeling and Software, San Diego, CA, 2014.   
     
    ** ''A brief introduction to workflows for scientists, giving examples and explanations of their benefits''
     
    ** ''A brief introduction to workflows for scientists, giving examples and explanations of their benefits''
      

    Revision as of 23:22, 12 March 2015


    What This Task Involves

    The training session and training materials indicate how to:

    1. Capture the provenance of the results in a paper
    2. Develop a workflow sketch, a formal workflow, or a provenance record that represent to different degrees of accuracy what the provenance of the results is
    3. Publish the provenance and make it part of a publication

    Training Materials

    This training session was held on March 6, 2015:

    Suggested Readings

    • "A Primer for the PROV Provenance Model." Yolanda Gil, Simon Miles, Khalid Belhajjame, Helena Deus, Daniel Garijo, Graham Klyne, Paolo Missier, Stian Soiland-Reyes, and Stephan Zednik. Published as a W3C Working Group Note on 30 April 2013.
      • A brief and practical introduction to the PROV standard for provenance, showing examples of how to represent the provenance record in RDF through a simple notation called Turtle

    What To Do

    We described many options in the training. Here is a sketch of the most common approach:

    1. Create a public entry for your dataset with a permanent unique identifier.



    Properties
    Credits
    Users who have contributed to this Task, its SubTasks and Answers: