Toggle Main Menu Toggle Search

Open Access padlockePrints

Provenance and data differencing for workflow reproducibility analysis

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Paolo MissierORCiD, Dr Simon Woodman, Dr Hugo Hiden, Professor Paul WatsonORCiD

Downloads

Full text is not currently available for this publication.


Abstract

One of the foundations of science is that researchers must publish the methodology used to achieve their results so that others can attempt to reproduce them. This has the added benefit of allowing methods to be adopted and adapted for other purposes. In the field of e-Science, services – often choreographed through workflow, process data to generate results. The reproduction of results is often not straightforward as the computational objects may not be made available or may have been updated since the results were generated. For example, services are often updated to fix bugs or improve algorithms. This paper addresses these problems in three ways. Firstly, it introduces a new framework to clarify the range of meanings of "reproducibility". Secondly, it describes a new algorithm, PDIFF, that uses a comparison of workflow provenance traces to determine whether an experiment has been reproduced; the main innovation is that if this is not the case then the specific point(s) of divergence are identified through graph analysis, assisting any researcher wishing to understand those differences. One key feature is support for user-defined, semantic data comparison operators. Finally, the paper describes an implementation of PDIFF that leverages the power of the e-Science Central platform which enacts workflows in the cloud. As well as automatically generating a provenance trace for consumption by PDIFF, the platform supports the storage and re-use of old versions of workflows, data and services; the paper shows how this can be powerfully exploited in order to achieve reproduction and re-use.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Missier P, Woodman S, Hiden H, Watson P

Publication type: Report

Publication status: Published

Series Title: School of Computing Science Technical Report Series

Year: 2012

Pages: 32

Print publication date: 01/10/2012

Source Publication Date: October 2012

Report Number: 1353

Institution: Newcastle University

Place Published: Newcastle upon Tyne

URL: http://www.cs.ncl.ac.uk/publications/trs/papers/1353.pdf


Share