Monthly Archives: July 2012

Goleta seven-meter sea-level rise map (pdf)

This map was made by Darren Hardy (UCSB) with a DEM and ESRI software.

PDF file: 2007-02-27 7m Goleta

Goleta 7 meter sea-level rise map

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Carpinteria Seven-meter sea-level rise map (PDF)

This map was made by Darren Hardy (UCSB) with a DEM and ESRI software.

Carpinteria 7 meter sea level rise map

PDF FILE: 2007-02-27 7m Carp

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Santa Barbara Downtown seven-meter sea-level rise map (pdf)

This map was made by Darren Hardy (UCSB) with a DEM and ESRI software.

Downloadable PDF: 2007-02-27 7m SB City center

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Santa Barbara 7 meter sea level rise map (pdf)

This map was created by Darren Hardy (UCSB) from a DEM and ESRI software.

The PDF File Download: 2007-02-27 7m SB far

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Skolr: the Digital Science Poster Service and Repository

Each year, US researchers spend 4000 person years creating and exhibiting posters at meetings (globally it could well be 10 times this number). Science (and engineering) posters are a window into the state of knowledge and research at hundreds of universities and research laboratories. These posters are designed to highlight the latest achievements… years before these are published. Often displayed for a few hours to several individuals, the posters are generally tossed away (as is their ephemeral fate). The equivalent of centuries of work dumped into landfills without a trace each year. In January 2011, the Federation had a better idea; In the hallway of the Winter 2011 ESIP Federation Meeting, 
a conversation was started on the value of a digital poster service for the ESIP meetings: the initial added value was access—access across the whole Federation, and access across time. The notion of an ESIP Digital Poster Service was born. Within a month, this conversation was expanded to include the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Within 3 months the pilot effort was funded to be tested at the 2011 Summer ESIP meeting. Beyond the scope of the Federation, the idea of an academy-wide digital poster commons captures the real value that science/engineering posters bring to the research endeavor. When combined with semantic and geographic services, posters become postcards that science teams send out to the entire academy… seeking for new ideas and potential new collaborations.

 

TOP 10 Potential Benefits of Skolr

 

1. Improve the ROI for hundreds of thousands of science posters each year

2. Improve the experience at thousands of science meetings each year

3. Accelerate the pace of science communication

4. Accelerate the rate of science innovation

5. Build a global real-time commons for research in-progress

6. Connect hundreds of third-world scientists to their first-world peers

7. Help thousands of graduate students find research collaborators

8. Build discoverable links between research, data, and null-results

9. Create active links between science domains

10. Build a researchable archive for millions of science posters for decades to come

Here are some next steps:

  • Review the pilot test and record lessons learned for the next phase.
  • Develop partnerships with other Earth Science meeting organizers (and then, other disciplines) to add more meetings.
  • Acquire support for a more robust digital meeting poster service that can accommodate a wide range of meeting requirements.
  • Build the poster commons metadata requirements and APIs to the open-source poster service.
  • Enlist experts and stakeholders in the conversation about the merits, opportunities, and complexities of this service.

The Skolr project is grateful to the following Funders:

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NMRI a partner in MacArthur Foundation funded “Sampling the Sea”

Posted April 24th, 2009  Image(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation today announced that the Carsey-Wolf Center for Film, Television, and New Media at UC Santa Barbara is one of 14 institutions throughout the world to be awarded a prestigious Digital Media and Learning Innovation grant.

Selected from among more than 700 proposals, the winning projects from universities, individuals, and organizations are expected to make pioneering contributions to the emerging field of digital media education. The MacArthur Foundation distributed a total of $2 million to develop novel learning environments using a broad range of digital media tools.

The Digital Media and Learning Competition is part of the foundation’s $50 million initiative designed to help determine how digital technologies are changing the way young people learn, play, socialize, and participate in civic life.

MacArthur president Jonathan Fanton described the winners as “true exemplars of how digital media are transforming the way we think and learn.”

UCSB’s Carsey-Wolf Center received $211,000 to support a multidisciplinary entrepreneurial ocean science education and social networking initiative. Titled “DigitalOcean: Sampling the Sea,” the pilot project will focus on ocean sustainability and engage 200 middle and high school classrooms around the globe in a dynamic online international learning community. Participants will collect and share data, images, and stories about seafood choices in their communities and learn how these choices affect the health of the world’s oceans.

“Sampling the Sea uses multidisciplinary teams of students, scientists, and new media experts, partnering with Google Ocean, NASA GLOBE, and ePals, to engage the next generation of consumers in a global dialogue on the interrelationships among local human customs, regulatory laws, fishing practices, wildlife management, and the future of the sea,” said Constance Penley, project leader and co-director of the Carsey-Wolf Center.

The UCSB initiative is important because it uses innovative participatory learning techniques such as online social networking, photo sharing, “mashing-up,” and gaming to bring ocean literacy to classrooms where today it is almost entirely missing.

“With the majority of the world’s fisheries projected to collapse by the middle of the 21st Century, and nearly a third of major fish species already seriously depleted, it is vital that young people collaborate on understanding the implications of how we harvest and consume seafood if we are to create a cultural consensus to address this problem before it is too late,” noted Penley, who is also a professor of film and media studies. “We want to create a fan base for the ocean.”

Additional UCSB researchers participating in the project are Steven Gaines, director of the Marine Science Institute and professor of ecology, evolution, and marine biology; John Melack, acting dean of the Donald Bren School of Environmental Science and Management and professor of ecology, evolution, and marine biology; Ronald E. Rice, co-director of the Carsey-Wolf Center and Arthur N. Rupe professor of communication; Cathy Boggs, associate director of the Carsey-Wolf Center; and Bruce Caron, project manager and executive director of the New Media Research Institute in Santa Barbara.

At the Carsey-Wolf Center for Film, Television, and New Media, scholars from UCSB’s nationally renowned departments of film and media studies and communication collaborate with researchers drawn from all of the university’s schools and divisions to study everything from silent films to the latest in digital media and satellite communications. It is one of the first centers at a major university where faculty from the arts, humanities, and sciences collaborate to teach and study mass media from a variety of social, cultural, historical, and scientific perspectives.

The Carsey-Wolf Center’s Environmental Media Initiative brings media and communication scholars together with environmental scientists to engage in teaching and research. “Sampling the Sea” is a pilot project of the Environmental Media Initiative’s “DigitalOcean,” an ocean science education and social networking infrastructure project to create international, multigenerational communities working for ocean conservation. Support for the initial development of DigitalOcean was provided by the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation.

The Digital Media and Learning Competition is funded by a MacArthur Foundation grant to UC Irvine and Duke University. It is administered by the Humanities, Arts, Science and Technology Advanced Collaboratory, a virtual network of learning institutions committed to new forms of collaboration across communities and disciplines fostered by the creative use of technology.

The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation is a private, independent grant-making institution helping to build a more just and sustainable world. Through the support it provides, the foundation fosters the development of knowledge, nurtures individual creativity, strengthens institutions, helps improve public policy and provides information to the public, primarily through support for public interest media. With assets of more than $6.4 billion, the foundation makes approximately $225 million in grants annually and works in 60 countries.

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Durban South Africa is drawing a line in the sand against climate change

September 27, 2011. Tony Carnie at The Mercury reports on the Blue Line being drawn across the city of Durban, South Africa to mark the threat of future climate change.

Here is an excerpt from that story:

“A “Blue LINE” will be painted along several sections of the Durban beachfront within the next few weeks to show just how high the sea could rise if nothing is done to halt climate change.

KwaZulu-Natal Premier Zweli Mkhize said the idea behind the project was to raise awareness about some of the “devastating impacts” of climate change in the build-up to the UN climate change summit (COP17) to be held in Durban from November 28 to December 9.

Opening the provincial summit on climate change in Durban yesterday, he said his office was planning a march through the city during the summit.

It was hoped ministers, business leaders and other groups would participate in the march, which would follow part of the “blue line” representing a possible future sea level rise in Durban.

Details have not been announced yet, but it is understood that the line could be based on a 1m rise in sea level.

Based on recent research and computer modelling by the eThekwini municipality, a 1m rise is likely to undermine or destroy large areas of Durban’s Golden Mile, including several hotels and other tourist infrastructure.

The city has modelled a number of scenarios based on projections of 300mm, 600mm and 1m sea-level rises.

Four years ago, the UN’s expert scientific body on climate change projected that the sea level around the world could rise from anywhere between 180mm and 580mm by the end of this century as result of rising ocean temperatures and the melting of glaciers, snow and ice in polar regions.

However, recent work by German climate change researcher Stefan Rahmstorf and other scientists has suggested a sea-level rise of 1m was possible before 2100.

Some cities in the US and other parts of the world are also considering demarcating blue lines to raise awareness.”

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Bruce Caron: Executive Director

IFBruce is the founder and the Executive Director at the Studio. He maintains his profile on ORCID.

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NASA picks New Media Research Institute to help coordinate its earth science internet technology effort

NASA Science on Drupal Central Project, a collaboration between the New Media Research Institute in Santa Barbara and a team at the University of Alabama, Huntsville, has received two years of funding from the NASA Science Mission Directorate Research Opportunities in Space and Earth Sciences Advancing Collaborative Connections for Earth System Science (NNH11ZDA001N-ACCESS).

Bruce Caron, Executive Director of the New Media Studio, and principal investigator for the Project notes, “Drupal hosting, administration, user interface work, and service and tool integration on Drupal sites are already widespread activities within NASA earth science. Many NASA Centers, funded projects, and other partners are in the process of, or have completed the migration of, their content onto Drupal.”

The NASA Science on Drupal Central (NSODC) project will offer key support and a centralized knowledge base focused on the use of Drupal with existing and emerging NASA earth data collections and services. NSODC will deliver a Drupal site where NASA scientists and technicians can share their Drupal lessons learned, register their code contributions to the Drupal code collection, discuss issues of NASA-specific common interest, and search, find, and reuse NASA-funded Drupal code.

NSODC will also provide a home for more general, Drupal-wide knowledge sharing aimed to support Drupal site administrators across NASA Earth Science; however, its main focus will be on science and data tools on Drupal. NSODC will host Drupal Camps at summer ESIP Federation meetings, and coordinate Drupal discussions and activities at NASA workshops. The project will coordinate with the growing Drupal development community (drupal.org) to add new open-source code resources.

NSODC will also build and share some tool frameworks on existing Drupal modules. These can be reused and customized by others to accelerate NASA data tool development on Drupal. Tools and code are one half of the effort. The other half is community-building support. NASA Science on Drupal will engage NASA Drupal code developers and site administrators as a community of purpose and provide avenues of communication, collaboration, and resource sharing.

“Through active knowledge sharing and the resulting collective intelligence, NASA will save time and money and deliver more earth data and information using Drupal-based websites.” said Caron.

Abstracts for all funded projects are available here.
http://nspires.nasaprs.com/external/viewrepositorydocument/cmdocumentid=…

The New Media Research Institute is the research wing of the New Media Studio, Inc. a non-profit corporation based in Santa Barbara, California.

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Mike Goodchild: Founding Director Emeritus

Michael F. Goodchild is Emeritus Professor of Geography at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he also holds the title of Research Professor. Until his retirement in June 2012 he was Jack and Laura Dangermond Professor of Geography, and Director of UCSB’s Center for Spatial Studies. He received his BA degree from Cambridge University in Physics in 1965 and his PhD in geography from McMaster University in 1969, and has received four honorary doctorates. He was elected member of the National Academy of Sciences and Foreign Member of the Royal Society of Canada in 2002, member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2006, and Foreign Member of the Royal Society and Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy in 2010; and in 2007 he received the Prix Vautrin Lud. He was editor of Geographical Analysis between 1987 and 1990 and editor of the Methods, Models, and Geographic Information Sciences section of the Annals of the Association of American Geographers from 2000 to 2006. He serves on the editorial boards of ten other journals and book series, and has published over 15 books and 500 articles. He was Chair of the National Research Council’s Mapping Science Committee from 1997 to 1999, and of the Advisory Committee on Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences of the National Science Foundation from 2008 to 2010. His research interests center on geographic information science, spatial analysis, and uncertainty in geographic data.

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