Posts Tagged ‘Axiom Data Science’
Demo of Data Explorer New Features Video Available
In case you missed the latest demonstration of the newest features of Data Explorer, you can watch it here. Axiom Data Science Senior Software Engineer Brian Stone and OOI’s Senior Manager of Cyberinfrastructure Jeffrey Glatstein explain the latest additions to Data Explorer include a beta display of high-definition video streams, additional differentiation between the Axial Seamount and Oregon Margin Regional Cabled Array Assets, human-in-the-loop quality control flag display, and two ADCP instruments that were previously not visualized.
[embed]https://youtu.be/BcMi3lHSUB0[/embed] Read MoreOOI Virtual Town Hall: Demo of Data Explorer Latest Features
Join Axiom Data Science Senior Software Engineer Brian Stone and OOI’s Senior Manager of Cyberinfrastructure Jeffrey Glatstein as they demonstrate the latest features of Data Explorer and answer your questions about how you might use their features in your research. Advance registration needed. Please register here.
Read MoreNew Features of Data Explorer Demo
In case you missed it, here is a video of the OOI Town Hall on July 26, 2023 during which the new features of Data Explorer were demonstrated and questions answered.
[embed]https://vimeo.com/849129117[/embed] Read MoreLatest Version of Data Explorer Launched May 30
OOI’s Data Science Team, working with Axiom Data Science, announced additional improvements to OOI’s data access and visualization tool, Data Explorer will publicly launch on May 30, 2023. The latest Data Explorer, version 1.5, includes a significant expansion of data availability, updates to a viewer for underway still images, and introduces a beta version of real-time streaming for cabled instruments. Version 1.5 offers new scientific data for Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUV) and Bio-Acoustic Sonar (ZPLS) instruments and Principal Investigator-added instrument data are now available on the site. Visitors to the site will experience optimization and new viewing capabilities for still and animated images. Additionally, data are streamed in real-time by the second for cabled instruments in the Regional Cabled Array, giving users the most up-to-date information available.
“A great deal of effort goes on behind-the-scenes to make Data Explorer be responsive to users’ needs and provide seamless, quick access to data,” explained Jeffrey Glatstein, Senior Manager of Cyberinfrastructure and OOI Data Delivery Lead at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. “We are grateful to our team and the developers at Axiom who continually make this already great tool, even better.”
Details about the new features are included in the following:
New Features
ZPLS instrument data will now be online for more locations, including the Coastal (Endurance) and Global Arrays (Argentine Basin). This is the first time this type of OOI bioacoustics sonar data have been available in an interactive visualization. This version addressed feedback received from subject matter experts to improve the data charts, including respecting time selections among sonar frequencies, changing variable names, and addresses frequency sorting. Other technical fixes have been made to the backend in response to users’ suggestions, which will help make these data more accessible.
[media-caption path="https://oceanobservatories.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/1_1.5_zpls.jpg" link="#"]An example echogram from the bioacoustics sonar instrument on the Coastal Endurance array. The bio-acoustic sonar measures acoustic signals of plankton and zooplankton using sound waves which bounce off organisms back towards the sensor in a phenomenon known as “backscatter.”[/media-caption] [media-caption path="https://oceanobservatories.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/2_1.5_auv.jpg" link="#"]An example of interactive AUV data at the Coastal Pioneer Array in the Data Explorer. The travel trajectory of the AUV across the shelf-break is shown in the map. Data collected by the instrument as it dives from the sea surface to a maximum depth of 600m is shown in the chart on the right. Users can visualize data in 3-D across the water column in the lower interactive chart.[/media-caption]A media server will now be up and running on Data Explorer. In this version, updates have been made to improve the performance of the still image viewer. All image collections are shown in a Grid view which makes seeing what is available easier. Camera metadata is now available via a more information tab. Images will also be available on the pages included in time series. Images will also be available as a single image or in animation viewer. Full size images are presented with an image scale and available for download.
[media-caption path="https://oceanobservatories.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/3_1.5_image-viewer.jpg" link="#"]Cameras are attached to instruments on the cabled infrastructure of the OOI Regional Cabled Array. These long-term imagery records are now available in the Data Explorer for viewing and download to help understand life in deep water and coastal environments. The camera at Endurance Offshore is designed to look at the seafloor in general, observing animal activity, sediment transport, detritus falls, and bioturbation.[/media-caption] [media-caption path="https://oceanobservatories.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/4_1.5_image-viewer.jpg" link="#"]The media viewer in the Data Explorer allows users to pan and expand images, select images across a timeseries, view camera metadata, download images, and animate images across time.[/media-caption]Another added beta media feature is real-time streaming of Cabled Array instrument data. The design of this function is meant to be user-friendly. A Grid view shows available real-time streaming instruments. A Single view shows a real-time streaming chart, with data from the last 24 hours. These features are available from Data Explorer’s landing page with further explanations of what data are available and when.
Added Glatstein, “We invite all OOI data users to try out these new components and continue to provide us feedback. We are particularly eager to hear the community’s response to the beta version of the media server so we can tweak that as needed.”
[media-caption path="https://oceanobservatories.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/5_1.5_real-time.jpg" link="#"]An example of real-time streaming data now available for instruments on the Regional Cabled Array. This network of >100 cabled instruments and instrumented moorings transmit data to shore in real-time via fiber optic technology. Users can view and interact with new data every second as it is streamed from the deep ocean to shore.[/media-caption]
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Data Explorer Receives Environmental Business Journal Award
The Environmental Business Journal (EBJ) recognized the Ocean Observatories Initiative’s (OOI) Data Explorer’s ability to manage and visualize data with one of its annual awards for Information Technology.
Tetra Tech will accept the award at the EBJ awards ceremony in March 2023 for its role in designing open-source software to support the management, accessibility, and visualization of ocean data. Axiom Data Science, a Tetra Tech company, worked with the OOI Cyberinfrastructure team to develop both front-end and back-end systems for data management and visualization of OOI data feeds.
The OOI, funded by the National Science Foundation, delivers real-time data from sensors in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans to address critical questions regarding the world’s oceans. Axiom Data Science played a foundational role in designing and operationalizing the Data Explorer, the primary gateway for discovering, visualizing, and accessing OOI data. The Data Explorer makes it possible to search across data points, download full datasets, and compare datasets across regions and disciplines for more than 900 instruments in near real-time. In 2022, Axiom Data Science upgraded the OOI cyberinfrastructure to improve the OOI’s ability to serve ultra-high resolution data streams from next generation ocean instrumentation that span the ocean floor to the sea surface.
“We are honored to have worked with Axiom Data Science to make OOI’s vast amount of data accessible and useable and congratulate them on this recognition of their exceptional work,” said Jeffrey Glatstein, OOI’s Data Delivery Lead and Senior Manager of Cyberinfrastructure. “The capabilities of Data Explorer are only beginning to be realized and will serve the ocean community for years to come.”
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