[Colloquium] Seminar Announcement: Applications of the FACE-IT portal and workflow engine for operational food quality prediction and assessment: Mussel farm monitoring in the Bay of Napoli, Italy

Ninfa Mayorga via Colloquium colloquium at mailman.cs.uchicago.edu
Wed Mar 29 13:59:16 CDT 2017


Computation Institute Presentation - Data Lunch Seminar (DLS)

Speaker: Raffaele Montella, Department of Science and Technology, University of Naples “Parthenope”, Italy
Hosts:  Kyle Chard and Alison Brizius
Date:  March 31, 2017
Time: 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM 
Location: The University of Chicago, Searle 240A, 5735 S. Ellis Ave.

Title:  Applications of the FACE-IT portal and workflow engine for operational food quality prediction and assessment: Mussel farm monitoring in the Bay of Napoli, Italy

Abstract: Mussel farm product quality remains a challenging problem for operational marine science. In an operational scenario, the model chain, orchestrated in a workflow fashion, produces a huge amount of predicted spatially-referenced (big) data. These workflow components have been integrated into the Framework to Advance Climate, Economic, and Impact Investigations with Information Technology (FACE- IT), a workflow engine and data science portal based on Galaxy and Globus technologies. We describe how FACE-IT workflows can be used to couple many simulation/prediction models, leveraging high-performance and cloud computing resources to enable fast full system modeling in order to produce operational predictions about the impact of pollutants spilled out from both natural and anthropic sources in mussels farming high density areas.
  
Bio:
Raffaele Montella works as assistant professor, with tenure, in Computer Science at Department of Science and Technology, University of Naples “Parthenope”, Italy since 2005. He got his degree (MSc equivalent) in (Marine) Environmental Science at the University of Naples “Parthenope” in 1998 defending a thesis about the “Development of a GIS system for marine applications” scoring with laude and an award mention to his study career. He defended his PhD thesis about “Environmental modeling and Grid Computing techniques” earning the PhD in Marine Science and Engineering at the University of Naples Federico II.

The research main topics and the scientific production are focused on tools for high performance computing, such as grid, cloud and GPUs with applications in the field of computational environmental science (multidimensional big data/distributed computing for modeling and scientific workflows and science gateways) leveraging on his previous (and still ongoing) experiences in embedded/mobile/wearable/pervasive computing and internet of things. He joined the CI/RDCEP of the University of Chicago as Visiting Scholar and as Visiting Assistant Professor working on the FACE-IT project.
 
Information: Lunch will be provided

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