Volume 52, Issue 4 p. 873-889
Technical Paper

HydroShare: Sharing Diverse Environmental Data Types and Models as Social Objects with Application to the Hydrology Domain

Jeffery S. Horsburgh,

Assistant Professor

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Utah Water Research Laboratory, Utah State University, 8200 Old Main Hill, Logan, Utah, 84322

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Mohamed M. Morsy,

PhD Candidate

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, 22904

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Anthony M. Castronova,

Research Assistant Professor

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Utah Water Research Laboratory, Utah State University, 8200 Old Main Hill, Logan, Utah, 84322

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Jonathan L. Goodall,

Associate Professor

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, 22904

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Tian Gan,

PhD Candidate

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Utah Water Research Laboratory, Utah State University, 8200 Old Main Hill, Logan, Utah, 84322

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Hong Yi,

Senior Research Software Developer

Renaissance Computing Institute, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 27517

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Michael J. Stealey,

Senior Research Software Developer

Renaissance Computing Institute, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 27517

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David G. Tarboton,

Professor

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Utah Water Research Laboratory, Utah State University, 8200 Old Main Hill, Logan, Utah, 84322

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First published: 30 October 2015
Citations: 39
Paper No. JAWRA-15-0082-P of the Journal of the American Water Resources Association (JAWRA).
Discussions are open until six months from issue publication.

Abstract

The types of data and models used within the hydrologic science community are diverse. New repositories have succeeded in making data and models more accessible, but are, in most cases, limited to particular types or classes of data or models and also lack the type of collaborative and iterative functionality needed to enable shared data collection and modeling workflows. File sharing systems currently used within many scientific communities for private sharing of preliminary and intermediate data and modeling products do not support collaborative data capture, description, visualization, and annotation. In this article, we cast hydrologic datasets and models as “social objects” that can be published, collaborated around, annotated, discovered, and accessed. This article describes the generic data model and content packaging scheme for diverse hydrologic datasets and models used by a new hydrologic collaborative environment called HydroShare to enable storage, management, sharing, publication, and annotation of the diverse types of data and models used by hydrologic scientists. The flexibility of HydroShare's data model and packaging scheme is demonstrated using multiple hydrologic data and model use cases that highlight its features.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.