TY - GEN
T1 - My-Plant.org
T2 - 2010 Gateway Computing Environments Workshop, GCE 2010
AU - Hanlon, Matthew R.
AU - Mock, Stephen
AU - Nuthulapati, Praveen
AU - Gonzales, Michael B.
AU - Soltis, Pamela
AU - Soltis, Douglas
AU - Majure, Lucas C.
AU - Payton, Adam
AU - Mishler, Brent
AU - Tremblay, Susan
AU - Madsen, Thomas
AU - Olmstead, Richard
AU - McCourt, Richard
AU - Wojciechowski, Martin
AU - Merchant, Nirav
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - My-Plant.org (My-Plant) is a social networking portal for the Plant Sciences community. As part of the iPlant Collaborative, My-Plant is charged with the goal of bringing together scientists, students, educators, and other interested parties by providing a new approach to connecting with others in the plant sciences thereby helping to spark new collaborations and communication among them. Many social networking sites exist where users can form groups and communicate, but the group structure is flat and has no inherent interconnectivity. My-Plant connects users via branches (called clades) of the phylogenetic tree of green plants, thus creating a unique, phylogenetically based social network structure. My-Plant users can join clades at any level of the tree and collaborate with other users interested in these clades. My-Plant is built upon the Drupal open source content management system. This paper discusses My-Plant in detail, its concept and contributions to the iPlant Collaborative, its implementation details, and its efforts to become an information hub for the plant sciences community. In addition, the paper focuses on some of the technology challenges, lessons learned, and future work of My-Plant.
AB - My-Plant.org (My-Plant) is a social networking portal for the Plant Sciences community. As part of the iPlant Collaborative, My-Plant is charged with the goal of bringing together scientists, students, educators, and other interested parties by providing a new approach to connecting with others in the plant sciences thereby helping to spark new collaborations and communication among them. Many social networking sites exist where users can form groups and communicate, but the group structure is flat and has no inherent interconnectivity. My-Plant connects users via branches (called clades) of the phylogenetic tree of green plants, thus creating a unique, phylogenetically based social network structure. My-Plant users can join clades at any level of the tree and collaborate with other users interested in these clades. My-Plant is built upon the Drupal open source content management system. This paper discusses My-Plant in detail, its concept and contributions to the iPlant Collaborative, its implementation details, and its efforts to become an information hub for the plant sciences community. In addition, the paper focuses on some of the technology challenges, lessons learned, and future work of My-Plant.
KW - Biology
KW - Drupal
KW - Green plants
KW - Molecular evolution
KW - My-Plant
KW - Phylogenetics
KW - Plant sciences
KW - Social networking
KW - Web 2.0
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=78751526047&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=78751526047&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/GCE.2010.5676118
DO - 10.1109/GCE.2010.5676118
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:78751526047
SN - 9781424497515
T3 - 2010 Gateway Computing Environments Workshop, GCE 2010
BT - 2010 Gateway Computing Environments Workshop, GCE 2010
Y2 - 14 November 2010 through 14 November 2010
ER -