CALATRAVA, Amanda, Hernán ASOREY, Jan ASTALOS, Alberto AZEVEDO, Francesco BENINCASA, Ignacio BLANQUER, Martin BOBAK, Francisco BRASILEIRO, Laia CODÓ, Laura del CANO, Borja ESTEBAN, Meritxell FERRET, Josef HANDL, Tobias KERZENMACHER, Valentin KOZLOV, Aleš KŘENEK, Ricardo MARTINS, Manuel PAVESIO, Antonio Juan RUBIO-MONTERO and Juan SÁNCHEZ-FERRERO. A survey of the European Open Science Cloud services for expanding the capacity and capabilities of multidisciplinary scientific applications. COMPUTER SCIENCE REVIEW. NETHERLANDS: ELSEVIER, 2023, vol. 49. ISSN 1574-0137. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cosrev.2023.100571.
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Basic information
Original name A survey of the European Open Science Cloud services for expanding the capacity and capabilities of multidisciplinary scientific applications
Authors CALATRAVA, Amanda, Hernán ASOREY, Jan ASTALOS, Alberto AZEVEDO, Francesco BENINCASA, Ignacio BLANQUER, Martin BOBAK, Francisco BRASILEIRO, Laia CODÓ, Laura del CANO, Borja ESTEBAN, Meritxell FERRET, Josef HANDL, Tobias KERZENMACHER, Valentin KOZLOV, Aleš KŘENEK, Ricardo MARTINS, Manuel PAVESIO, Antonio Juan RUBIO-MONTERO and Juan SÁNCHEZ-FERRERO.
Edition COMPUTER SCIENCE REVIEW, NETHERLANDS, ELSEVIER, 2023, 1574-0137.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Country of publisher Netherlands
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Impact factor Impact factor: 12.900 in 2022
Organization unit Institute of Computer Science
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cosrev.2023.100571
Keywords in English Open science; Cloud computing; Federated infrastructure; Multidisciplinary; EOSC
Tags J-Q1
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Aleš Křenek, Ph.D., učo 3086. Changed: 8/6/2023 10:05.
Abstract
Open Science is a paradigm in which scientific data, procedures, tools and results are shared transparently and reused by society. The European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) initiative is an effort in Europe to provide an open, trusted, virtual and federated computing environment to execute scientific applications and store, share and reuse research data across borders and scientific disciplines. Additionally, scientific services are becoming increasingly data-intensive, not only in terms of computationally intensive tasks but also in terms of storage resources. To meet those resource demands, computing paradigms such as High-Performance Computing (HPC) and Cloud Computing are applied to e-science applications. However, adapting applications and services to these paradigms is a challenging task, commonly requiring a deep knowledge of the underlying technologies, which often constitutes a general barrier to its uptake by scientists. In this context, EOSC-Synergy, a collaborative project involving more than 20 institutions from eight European countries pooling their knowledge and experience to enhance EOSC’s capabilities and capacities, aims to bring EOSC closer to the scientific communities. This article provides a summary analysis of the adaptations made in the ten thematic services of EOSC-Synergy to embrace this paradigm. These services are grouped into four categories: Earth Observation, Environment, Biomedicine, and Astrophysics. The analysis will lead to the identification of commonalities, best practices and common requirements, regardless of the thematic area of the service. Experience gained from the thematic services can be transferred to new services for the adoption of the EOSC ecosystem framework. The article made several recommendations for the integration of thematic services in the EOSC ecosystem regarding Authentication and Authorization (federated regional or thematic solutions based on EduGAIN mainly), FAIR data and metadata preservation solutions (both at cataloguing and data preservation—such as EUDAT’s B2SHARE), cloud platform-agnostic resource management services (such as Infrastructure Manager) and workload management solutions.
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