<p>Working under the Space Weather Technology, Research and Education Center (SWx-TREC https://www.colorado.edu/spaceweather/).&#160; The Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) is developing a Space Weather (SWx) Data Portal to provide unified access to disparate datasets to help close the Research to Operations (R2O) and Operations to Research (O2R) gap.&#160;</p><p>LASP is building the SWx Portal leveraging technologies developed in support of spacecraft operations (WEBTCAD), Irradiance Dataset viewing and downloading (LISIRD: http://lasp.colorado.edu/lisird/ ) and the MAVEN and MMS Science Data Portals.&#160; The primary technologies include a data model and software library that enables data interoperability known as LaTiS&#160;(https://github.com/latis-data) and the LASP Extended Metadata Repository (LEMR) which is developed as ontologies that not only represent the datasets, but also the front-end elements which are used to display them. &#160;Additionally, we have developed a JavaScript science data display technology that leverages off LaTiS server instances to allow for consistent and straightforward display of datasets. &#160;These technologies together facilitate a common interface to myriad datasets and formats which will enable us to expand the offerings quickly and provide consistent visualization, access to metadata, and download capabilities across them.</p><p>This presentation will discuss advancements in the portal development in the last year to both in terms of available datasets and in terms of new functionality.&#160; We will also provide a demonstration of the released system that will include datasets demonstrating a solar event, its progression toward Earth and its Earth affect perspective of Space Weather Data centering on the 2015 St. Patrick&#8217;s day storm.</p>
<p>The&#160;Space Weather Technology, Research and Education Center (SWx TREC)&#160;is a center of excellence in cross-disciplinary research, technology, innovation, and education, intended to facilitate evolving space weather research and forecasting needs.&#160; SWx TREC facilitates research advances, innovative missions, and data and computing technologies that directly support the needs of the SWx community to advance understanding and support closure of the Research to Operations (R2O) and Operations to Research (O2R) loop.&#160;Improving our understanding and prediction of space weather requires coupled Research and Operations. SWx-TREC is working to provide new research models, applications&#160;and data for use in operational environments, improving the Research-to-Operations (R2O) pipeline.&#160; Advancement in the fundamental scientific understanding of space weather processes is also vital, requiring that researchers have convenient and effective access to a wide variety of data sets and models from multiple sources. The space weather research community, as with many scientific communities, must access data from dispersed and often uncoordinated data repositories to acquire the data necessary for the analysis and modeling efforts that advance our understanding of solar influences and space physics in the Earth&#8217;s environment. The University of Colorado (CU) is a leading institution in both producing data products and advancing the state of scientific understanding of space weather processes, and we are now hosting both an interoperable data portal providing streamlined, centralized, and event-based access to a wide variety of disparate data sets and also a community-accessible, Cloud-based testbed environment to support development, testing, transition, and use of new models, visualizations, algorithms, and forecast products. &#160;In this presentation, we will describe our community-accessible testbed environment and demonstrate the Space Weather Data Portal.</p>
Awareness following general anesthesia is a rare event; however, it may have significant impact on patient satisfaction and long-term morbidity. Detecting intraoperative awareness during a general anesthetic is difficult due to the fact that the signs and symptoms are often absent in documented cases of awareness. Often, intraoperative awareness goes unnoticed until a patient reports the experience. Anesthesiologists should be cognizant of the risk factors associated with an increased risk of intraoperative awareness. Cesarean section performed under general anesthesia, cardiac surgery, and trauma surgery all carry an increased risk. Anesthesiologists should consider patient specific risk factors involving a higher than expected anesthetic requirement in developing their anesthetic plan. In the event of intraoperative awareness, the anesthesiologist’s actions and interactions with the patient are critical in improving the patient’s’ outcome and minimizing long-term psychological stress. Anesthesiologists should acknowledge the event and create a supportive relationship with the patient.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.