Shawn Bowers, Ph.D.

Professor, Computer Science

Dr. Bowers's research interests are broadly in the areas of conceptual modeling, knowledge representation, and data provenance. He was a Postdoctoral Researcher at the San Diego Supercomputer Center, and was an Associate Project Scientist at the UC Davis...

Bowers

Contact Information

Education & Curriculum Vitae

Ph.D., M.Sc., OGI School of Science and Engineering, Oregon Health & Science University

B.Sc., University of Oregon

Courses Taught

CPSC 324 Big Data Analytics

CPSC 326 Organization of Program Langs

Past Semesters

CPSC 223 Algorithm&Abstract Data Struct

CPSC 260 Computer Organization

CPSC 321 Database Management Systems

CPSC 322 Data Science Algorithms

CPSC 450 Design & Analysis-Comp Algorim

Dr. Bowers's research interests are broadly in the areas of conceptual modeling, knowledge representation, and data provenance. He was a Postdoctoral Researcher at the San Diego Supercomputer Center, and was an Associate Project Scientist at the UC Davis Genome Center. He has taught a variety of courses in database management systems, programming language design and implementation, algorithms and data structures, software engineering, and data mining/analytics.

His research interests are broadly in the area of conceptual modeling, knowledge representation, and data provenance.

Observational Data Semantics

Scientists often rely on observational data (i.e., sets of raw or derived "observations" and "measurements") to carry out analyses. While observational data is largely stored in spreadsheets or simple relational structures, the discovery, interpretation, and integration of observational data often requires complex metadata (e.g., to capture contextual information, measurement scales, experimental methods, and so on). As part of the NSF-funded Semtools and SONet projects, I collaborate with members of NCEAS and researchers at UC Davis to develop ontology-based models for representing the semantics of observational data, approaches for semantically annotating observational data sets, and tools that leverage annotations and corresponding ontologies for improving discovery and integration of ecological data. Our goal is to develop approaches and technology that can help scientists to more easily describe, find, and reuse observational data.

Scientific Workflow Modeling and Design

As a contributor to the Kepler Scientific Workflow System my interests are in making scientific workflows easier to specify, re-purpose, and reuse for scientists and workflow engineers. My work in this area explores typing mechanisms for scientific workflows, methods for composing dataflow and control-flow constructs, and support for processing nested data (i.e., XML) within Kepler. This work is being carried out within the NSF sponsored Kepler/CORE, Processing PhyloData, and the UC Davis Accelerating Genome-Scale Biological Research informatics projects.

Scientific Workflow Provenance

An advantage of scientific workflow systems over traditional scripting approaches is their ability to automatically record data and process dependencies introduced during a workflow run. With colleagues at UC Davis we are developing approaches to efficiently store, query, and visualize the provenance of workflow runs. Our work largely focuses on capturing and storing explicit data dependencies for general classes of workflow models, including those that work over structured (i.e., XML) data. This work has produced a new Query Language for Provenance (QLP) and corresponding storage and evaluation techniques for processing QLP queries.