October 1, 2005
Conference Paper

Adapting the Electronic Laboratory Notebook for the Semantic Era

Abstract

The open source Electronic Laboratory Notebook (ELN) is a collaborative, distributed, web-based notebook system, designed to provide researchers with a means to record and share their primary research notes and data. As with most electronic notebook (EN) systems, the ELN was originally designed as a closed system with its own data repository and implicit semantics. The Scientific Annotation Middleware (SAM) project, a Department of Energy (DOE)-funded effort at Pacific Northwest and Oak Ridge National Laboratories, envisions a new model in which ENs are simply one application contributing to a much richer and semantically explicit record. Such a record would include, for example, data provenance, descriptive metadata, and annotations from a wide range of applications, problem solving environments, and agents. This paper reports the adaptation of the (ELN) client to use SAM and the development of an initial set of SAM-based notebook services and semantic model, and then discusses the advantages of such an architecture in creating federated, human- and machine-interpretable, electronic research records.

Revised: May 19, 2011 | Published: October 1, 2005

Citation

Talbott T.D., M.R. Peterson, J. Schwidder, and J.D. Myers. 2005. Adapting the Electronic Laboratory Notebook for the Semantic Era. In Proceedings of the 2005 International Symposium on Collaborative Technologies and Systems, May 15-20, 2005, 136-143. Los Alamitos, California:IEEE Computer Society. PNNL-SA-44021. doi:10.1109/ISCST.2005.1553305