Workshops & Special Sessions
Innovative and Collaborative Problem Solving Environments (PSE) in Distributed Resources: PSE Workshop08
Organizers
Co-Chairmen
- Soonwook Hwang, Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information (KISTI), Daejon, Korea
- Mo Mu, Dept. of Mathematics, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong
Committee Members
- Ron Boisvert, Mathematics and Comput Sciences Division, NIST, USA
- Stratis Gallopoulos, University of Patras, Greece
- Ryutaro Himeno, RIKEN, 2-1, Hirosawa, Wako-shi, Saitama, Japan
- Elias Houstis, Department of Computer Eng and Comm, University of Thessaly, Greece
- Yoshimasa Kadooka, Fujitsu Lab, Fujitsu Co. LTD, Japan
- Shigeo Kawata, Graduate School of Engineering, Utsunomiya University, Japan
- David Meredith, Science and Technology Facilities Council, eScience Centre Daresbury Laboratory, UK
- Kimio Miyazawa, Fujitsu Lab, Fujitsu Co. LTD, Japan
- Naren Ramakrishnan, Department of Computer Science, Virginia Tech, USA
- Calvin J. Ribbens, Department of Computer Science, Virginia Tech, USA
- Yukio Umetani, Department of Computer Science, Shizuoka University, Japan
- Nancy Wilkins-Diehr, San Diego Supercomputer Center, University of California at San Diego, United States
- Heon-Young Yeom, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Seoul National University, Korea
- Wu Zhang, School of Computer Science and Engineering, Shanghai University, China
Abstract
Problem Solving Environment (PSE) represents an active newly emerging scientific and technological area in eScience. PSEs provide innovative computational facilities for easy incorporation of novel solution methods to solve a target class of problems. Grid environments, distributed and heterogeneous resources, and collaborative environments are critical components of PSEs.
The Grid and related distributed systems are large and complex information systems that integrate heterogeneous computer hardware resources, application software, middleware, experimental instruments, and so on. PSEs are friendly and efficient facilities to help users work with such complicated systems.
Key issues to be addressed in this session include PSE for Grid, PSE for collaborations, PSE for heterogeneous distributed system management, PSE for application developments, PSE for scientific computing, MPSE (Multi-physics-modeling PSE), PSE for education, as well as others issues related to PSEs for eSceince. There has been a lot of activity and progress in PSE research and development recently. The workshop will provide a forum for PSE researchers to exchange information and foster future research issues in the PSE area.
Date and Time
Thursday, December 11, 10 a.m.–4 p.m.
Papers
- 10–10:30 a.m.
- The Problem Solving Environments of TeraGrid, Science Gateways, and the Intersection of the Two
Jim Basney, Stuart Martin, JP Navarro, Marlon Pierce, Tom Scavo, Leif Strand, Tom Uram, Nancy Wilkins-Diehr, Wenjun Wu, Coonhan Youn - 10:30–11:00 a.m.
- A Login Shell for Computing Grid
Xiaoning Wang, Jian Lin, Li Zha - 11–11:30 a.m.
- A Grid-enabled Problem Solving Environment for Supporting Collaboreative Aerodynamic Engineering Process
Junehawk Lee, Dukyun Nam, Soonwook Hwang, Ok-hwan Byeon - 11:30 a.m.—1:30 p.m.
- Lunch
- 1:30–2:00 p.m.
- Jylab meets Eclipse: Integrating PSEs with multicomponent platforms
Giorgos Kollias, Kostantinos Georgiou, Strajs Gallopoulos - 2:00–2:30 p.m.
- Studies of Agent Composition Model of PSE- Bio Workflow
Jiang Xie, Wu Zhang, Guoyong Mao, Jian Mei - 2:30–3:00 p.m.
- e-Science Workbench: An Approach to build Domain-specific Problem Solving Environments
Dongsoo Han, Soonwook Hwang - 3–3:30 a.m.
- A Distributed Linkage Method for a Large Amount of Event Data
Hiromichi Kobashi, Riichiro Take, Shigeo Kawata