scholarly journals Supplementary material to "Spatio-temporal controls of C-N-P dynamics across headwater catchments of a temperate agricultural region from public data analysis"

Author(s):  
Stella Guillemot ◽  
Ophelie Fovet ◽  
Chantal Gascuel-Odoux ◽  
Gérard Gruau ◽  
Antoine Casquin ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott A. Jarmusch ◽  
Justin J. J. van der Hooft ◽  
Pieter C. Dorrestein ◽  
Alan K. Jarmusch

This review covers the current and potential use of mass spectrometry-based metabolomics data mining in natural products. Public data, metadata, databases and data analysis tools are critical. The value and success of data mining rely on community participation.


Author(s):  
Nasim Hajari ◽  
Wenjing He ◽  
Irene Cheng ◽  
Anup Basu ◽  
Bin Zheng

Author(s):  
Rodrigo Dos Santos Costa

In spite of a contemporary discussion about the management of knowledge and the deep use of technologies focused on architecture, organization and knowledge detection based on organization inner data analysis, as well as public data available on the internet, it is necessary a critic look above the organization knowledge creation processes even as the load of tacit knowledge there is in an organization. It is observed that the evolution of technologies, such as mobile computing, the web, besides the architecture of the computers and their ability of handling and storage data, has brought to the information economy or the age of knowledge, diverting focus on people, the central axis of organizational knowledge, and their ability to reason, infer, make decisions, and above them all the processes of knowledge creation focused on the collaborative solution of problems and generation of innovation based on the socialization of knowledge.


2021 ◽  
pp. 107-132
Author(s):  
Magy Seif El-Nasr ◽  
Truong Huy Nguyen Dinh ◽  
Alessandro Canossa ◽  
Anders Drachen

This chapter discusses the topic of how one can use visualization techniques to analyze game data. Specifically, the chapter delves into the development of heatmaps to analyze spatio-temporal data. The chapter also discusses spatio-temporal visualizations and state-action transition visualizations. We also discuss two visualization systems that we have developed within the GUII lab: Stratmapper and Glyph. We provide you with a link that allows you to explore the use of these visualizations with real game data. This chapter is written in collaboration with Riddhi Padte and Varun Sriram, based on their work in Dr. Seif El-Nasr’s game data science class at Northeastern University; Erica Kleinman, PhD student at University of California at Santa Cruz; and Andy Bryant, software engineer at GUII Lab. The chapter also includes labs where you get to experience the analysis of game data through visualization.


2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (01) ◽  
pp. 111-133
Author(s):  
Romita Banerjee ◽  
Karima Elgarroussi ◽  
Sujing Wang ◽  
Akhil Talari ◽  
Yongli Zhang ◽  
...  

Twitter is one of the most popular social media platforms used by millions of users daily to post their opinions and emotions. Consequently, Twitter tweets have become a valuable knowledge source for emotion analysis. In this paper, we present a new framework, K2, for tweet emotion mapping and emotion change analysis. It introduces a novel, generic spatio-temporal data analysis and storytelling framework that can be used to understand the emotional evolution of a specific section of population. The input for our framework is the location and time of where and when the tweets were posted and an emotion assessment score in the range [Formula: see text], with [Formula: see text] representing a very high positive emotion and [Formula: see text] representing a very high negative emotion. Our framework first segments the input dataset into a number of batches with each batch representing a specific time interval. This time interval can be a week, a month or a day. By generalizing existing kernel density estimation techniques in the next step, we transform each batch into a continuous function that takes positive and negative values. We have used contouring algorithms to find the contiguous regions with highly positive and highly negative emotions belonging to each member of the batch. Finally, we apply a generic, change analysis framework that monitors how positive and negative emotion regions evolve over time. In particular, using this framework, unary and binary change predicate are defined and matched against the identified spatial clusters, and change relationships will then be recorded, for those spatial clusters for which a match occurs. We also propose animation techniques to facilitate spatio-temporal data storytelling based on the obtained spatio-temporal data analysis results. We demo our approach using tweets collected in the state of New York in the month of June 2014.


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