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2025 July ESIP Meeting
We are a home for Earth science data and computing professionals. Our sessions bring together the community for hands-on, interdisciplinary deep dives as we explore "Innovation to Impact" this year. Learn more about ESIP: esipfed.org
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Tuesday, July 22
 

7:30am PDT

Breakfast
Tuesday July 22, 2025 7:30am - 8:30am PDT
Tuesday July 22, 2025 7:30am - 8:30am PDT
TBA

8:30am PDT

Welcome & Opening Plenary
Tuesday July 22, 2025 8:30am - 10:00am PDT
Speakers
avatar for Susan Shingledecker

Susan Shingledecker

Executive Director, Earth Science Information Partners
Susan is Executive Director or ESIP, Earth Science Information Partners, a global community of Earth science data professionals who come together to find solutions and advance data management to enable and empower the use of data to solve some of our planet's greatest challenges... Read More →
avatar for Brianna Pagán

Brianna Pagán

Technical Lead, Development Seed
Brianna is first and foremost an environmentalist with a passion for making science accessible and understandable to the masses. She brings over a decade of experience working from local to international environmental efforts, in a broad-range of groups including start-ups, research... Read More →
avatar for Xiuquan Wang

Xiuquan Wang

Professor, Canadian Centre for Climate Change and Adaptation, Univ. of Prince Edward Island
Dr. Xander Wang is currently a Professor in the School of Climate Change and Adaptation at the University of Prince Edward Island (UPEI), where he directs the Climate Smart Lab in the Canadian Centre for Climate Change and Adaptation. Dr. Wang is a member of the Royal Society of Canada... Read More →
Tuesday July 22, 2025 8:30am - 10:00am PDT
TBA

10:00am PDT

Coffee Break Networking
Tuesday July 22, 2025 10:00am - 11:00am PDT
Tuesday July 22, 2025 10:00am - 11:00am PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

Bridging Ground Measurements and Remote Observations in Ecosystem Monitoring
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Session Description
How do we bridge the gap between what we measure on the ground and what we observe from space? This session invites researchers from diverse disciplines to explore the integration of in-situ sensing and satellite observations across various spatial scales—from soil to leaf, across landscapes, and up to the global level.

Our focus centers on sensors and data integration workflows that make scalable, multi-resolution monitoring of ecosystems possible. We’ll explore how these sensor networks support understanding of vegetation dynamics, photosynthesis, carbon processes, touching on nature-based climate solutions though combined in-situ and remote sensing.

Speakers will present case studies and approaches involving:
  • Upscaling from the ground to satellite data
We may also touch on these:
  • SIF (solar-induced fluorescence)
  • SMAP (Soil Moisture Active Passive)
  • Albedo measurements
  • Drone and tower-based sensors
  • Other remote sensing tools
We’ll discuss practical challenges in ground-truthing, calibration, and cross-scale integration of sensor data—along with emerging solutions and standards.

Objectives:
  • Foster a community of practice for information exchange among researchers working on combining ground-based measurements with remote sensing.
  • Share tools, data, and insights that facilitate the integration of in-situ sensors with satellite observations.

Value to Session Participants
The value added from indexing observations across a leaf to globe spectrum will be at the forefront of session discussions. This session will distill the complexity down to leave attendees with an increased familiarity with data served from both sensors and satellites. Additionally, the session will show how these data are analyzed and used in tackling complex environmental monitoring blockers

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
No need to prepare beforehand


Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

11:00am PDT

Cloud Technologies as Catalysts for Next-Generation Research Communities
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Speakers
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

Federal Partner Engagement on Public Data & Product Changes
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Speakers
avatar for Leslie Hsu

Leslie Hsu

physical scientist, U.S. Geological Survey
Coordinator of the USGS Community for Data Integration and member of the USGS Science Data Management branch.https://github.com/hsu000001
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

Repository Crisis Scorecards - An Assessment of Organizational Resiliency to the Unexpected
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
The Repository Crisis Scorecards (RCS) are a set of tools to help a data facility determine their resiliency to unexpected events. We hope participants will bring their filled out scorecards to do some real time analysis of data, talk amongst all participants on how to face shared challenges, and form working groups towards future versions of the scorecards and papers on repository resiliency.

Value to Session Participants: Participants can fill out the scorecard and get a score on their organizational resiliency to crises. They can find other repositories that might be in similar places and start conversations on data sharing agreements, make plans to host other people's data. Participants can participate in developing the next version of the RCS and writing associated papers on it.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: Fill out the RCS, access through https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15122045. Please submit results using https://forms.gle/mmEWgCBMMWR3FYKr6All results will be kept private.
Speakers
avatar for Ruth Duerr

Ruth Duerr

Research Scholar, Ronin Institute for Independent Scholars
Practically anything - no sales pitches though
avatar for Rachael Blake

Rachael Blake

Director of Data Science, Intertidal Agency
JC

Jaycee Choi

Predoctoral Associate, The Jackson Laboratory
CB

Carolina Berys-Gonzalez

Data Manager, CCHDO/SIO/UCSD
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

12:30pm PDT

Lunch
Tuesday July 22, 2025 12:30pm - 2:00pm PDT
Tuesday July 22, 2025 12:30pm - 2:00pm PDT
TBA

1:00pm PDT

Newcomer Meet & Greet and Q&A (In-Person & Online)
Tuesday July 22, 2025 1:00pm - 1:30pm PDT
ESIP is a friendly group, but being a newcomer can be intimidating. Join us for this session dedicated to our first time attendees to help you get oriented to the Meeting and ESIP in general. Meet ESIP Staff, Board members and others like you who are new to the ESIP Community!
Tuesday July 22, 2025 1:00pm - 1:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Designing data services for people
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
Session Description
The most effective and high-impact data services and products are designed with the end user in mind. How can you start thinking like a designer from the beginning of a project? Come join us for a quick course in human-centered design and user research. We’ll practice some of the basic methods used by groups like the USDS/18F, IDEO, and Stanford’s d.school. There will be sticky notes and art supplies and How Might We questions. Bring your favorite exercises to share with the group. Leave with a better sense of how you can make sure what you create gets (re)used.

Value to Session Participants
Participants will walk away with some Design 101 skills, along with worksheets and other resources. They will connect with other people interested in human-centered design and contribute their knowledge.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
No recommendations provided


Speakers
KW

Kate Wing

Intertidal Agency
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Foundational to Emerging Cloud-Native Technology Part 1
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
Session Description
As cloud technologies evolve, the Earth science community must balance capacity building for foundational tooling with investing in what’s new. New technologies are often considered risky as they may be unstable and untested, but their potential is too great to ignore.

This two-part session will include presentations in part 1 and a working session in part 2. Part 1 presentations will introduce attendees to both established tools and practices (e.g., Xarray, Dask, Jupyter) and newer methods which have transformative potential (e.g., Jupyter-GIS, Icechunk). The popularization of virtualization via index caching for optimized querying and subsetting will be a primary focus of the emerging technologies section. As archives of cloud data continue to grow, virtualization and smart indexing of this data will become critical to optimizing access in the IO-bound nature of data on the cloud.

Part 2 will include parallel working sessions on foundational technologies and virtualization/indexing methods for participants to gain deeper understanding.

Looking forward, the cloud computing cluster would like to tackle the still current challenge of migrating data to the cloud and making it accessible. During the ESIP summer meeting, we'll collect input from both data providers and users through targeted surveys documenting migration contexts, goals, challenges, solutions and usage pain points. This feedback will inform roundtable discussions and potentially a white paper examining large-scale cloud data accessibility from multiple stakeholder perspectives.

Value to Session Participants
Participants will learn about existing and emerging cloud computing technologies and connect with other practitioners and developers.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for the Session
None provided
Speakers
avatar for Brianna Pagán

Brianna Pagán

Technical Lead, Development Seed
Brianna is first and foremost an environmentalist with a passion for making science accessible and understandable to the masses. She brings over a decade of experience working from local to international environmental efforts, in a broad-range of groups including start-ups, research... Read More →
avatar for Rich Signell

Rich Signell

Consultant, Open Science Computing
Talk to me about enabling horizontally scaling cloud solutions to work with climate or other large earth data effectively using the open source Pangeo community tools (e.g. xarray, Dask, holoviz, kerchunk).
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Principles for the development and curation of semantic resources in Earth science
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
Session Description
In the past years, the Earth science communities, including ESIP, have seen the come and go of many semantic initiatives and resources. Some of them, although generated impressive impact for a certain period of time, became hard to trace when their financial support ended and the research team dissolved. For this session we aim to have a brainstorm on the challenges and opportunities, and hopefully we can generate a list of principles or even a white paper on the best practices of curating semantic resources for Earth science.

Value to Session Participants
Participants can refresh their knowledge about semantic reproduce curation and share their experience with other scientists. Collaboratively, the session can generate a list of principles or even a white paper that can be shared with the global geoinformatics community.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
We probably will provide a draft document for the audience to collaborate on. Also a few lightning talks will be delivered at the first half of the session.


Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Shared approaches to automating data quality assessment across the repository landscape
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
Data fitness-for-purpose is an ongoing and critical issue for researchers and repositories that house Earth science data for discovery, access, and reuse. While much work has been done within disciplines and within specific institutions on how to quantify data quality, there is less consensus on how to standardize and share FAIR data assessments across disciplines. In this session, we will build on the existing momentum of ESIP partners focused on these issues, including work from the Data Readiness, Information Quality, and Data Stewardship clusters. The goal of the session will be to examine interoperability among automated assessment frameworks so that different groups can benefit from each others’ work in building and implementing assessment frameworks. For example, the DataONE MetaDIG framework assesses dataset FAIR checks across the 63 members of the network, and is extending its work into both general and discipline-specific data quality checks. Similarly, programs like NOAA’s GOMO Argo project, NCEI, and other examples like GoFAIR have developed approaches to automated quality assessment that could inform our discussions.

The session will start with 2-3 short introductory talks that introduce current approaches to automated FAIR data assessment, followed by breakout groups to identify areas of potential interoperability in both general and discipline-specific data quality checks.

Potential outputs:

- Brainstorm/Identify discipline-agnostic quality assessment checks
- Brainstorm/Identify discipline-specific data quality libraries / tests to build on
- Comparison of assessment systems and their assessment request and report formats
- Ideas for solving the distributed data problem for data assessment across repository networks
- Recommendations for standardized assessment protocols that enable cross-repository collaboration.      


Value to Session Participants: We expect participants to benefit by 1) learning about existing initiatives in data quality assessment; 2) gaining an increased appreciation of areas of interoperability in automated assessment; and 3) gaining new collaborators to help with shared implementation and operationalization of interoperable data quality frameworks.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: Participants can review literature on data quality assessment and approaches to automated data quality assessment, and can spend time thinking about the needs and use cases they might have for automated assessment tooling that interoperates across repositories.
Speakers
avatar for Matt Jones

Matt Jones

Director of Informatics R&D, University of California Santa Barbara
DataONE | Arctic Data Center | Open Science | Provenance and Semantics | Cyberinfrastructure
avatar for Eugene Burger

Eugene Burger

Director of the PMEL Research Services Division, OAR/PMEL
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Team Work Makes the Dream Work: Tales from Enterprise Product Planning and Implementation
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
This session would invite teams to present/discuss their perspectives and lessons learned from building a new products or major features for an enterprise where there are many stakeholders and teams involved. For example, I'm on a team working towards building a new ingest and archive system for NASA Earth. I would talk about our approach to requirements gathering, what has gone well, and what hasn't. It would be a tactful, but honest take on what a team can face with such an endeavor. The desired outcome for the session is to bring folks together over shared experiences, (hopefully) discuss positive outcomes, and provide suggestions for better team work or path to success.

Value to Session Participants: The session could relieve stress for folks who are working on complex problems and provide approaches/techniques for improvement.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: New topic that probably many participants have experienced at some time.
Speakers
avatar for Jess Welch

Jess Welch

Data Scientist | Project Coordinator, ORNL | NASA ESDIS
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

3:30pm PDT

Break
Tuesday July 22, 2025 3:30pm - 4:00pm PDT
Tuesday July 22, 2025 3:30pm - 4:00pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

4:00pm PDT

Current and emerging spatial search technology
Tuesday July 22, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
Speakers
Tuesday July 22, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

Foundational to Emerging Cloud-Native Technology Part 2
Tuesday July 22, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
Session Description
As cloud technologies evolve, the Earth science community must balance capacity building for foundational tooling with investing in what’s new. New technologies are often considered risky as they may be unstable and untested, but their potential is too great to ignore.

This two-part session will include presentations in part 1 and a working session in part 2. Part 1 presentations will introduce attendees to both established tools and practices (e.g., Xarray, Dask, Jupyter) and newer methods which have transformative potential (e.g., Jupyter-GIS, Icechunk). The popularization of virtualization via index caching for optimized querying and subsetting will be a primary focus of the emerging technologies section. As archives of cloud data continue to grow, virtualization and smart indexing of this data will become critical to optimizing access in the IO-bound nature of data on the cloud.

Part 2 will include parallel working sessions on foundational technologies and virtualization/indexing methods for participants to gain deeper understanding.

Looking forward, the cloud computing cluster would like to tackle the still current challenge of migrating data to the cloud and making it accessible. During the ESIP summer meeting, we'll collect input from both data providers and users through targeted surveys documenting migration contexts, goals, challenges, solutions and usage pain points. This feedback will inform roundtable discussions and potentially a white paper examining large-scale cloud data accessibility from multiple stakeholder perspectives.

Value to Session Participants
Participants will learn about existing and emerging cloud computing technologies and connect with other practitioners and developers.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for the Session
None provided
Speakers
avatar for Brianna Pagán

Brianna Pagán

Technical Lead, Development Seed
Brianna is first and foremost an environmentalist with a passion for making science accessible and understandable to the masses. She brings over a decade of experience working from local to international environmental efforts, in a broad-range of groups including start-ups, research... Read More →
avatar for Rich Signell

Rich Signell

Consultant, Open Science Computing
Talk to me about enabling horizontally scaling cloud solutions to work with climate or other large earth data effectively using the open source Pangeo community tools (e.g. xarray, Dask, holoviz, kerchunk).
Tuesday July 22, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

Making AI Actionable: Transforming Earth Science through Generative AI, Street View Imagery, and Machine Learning
Tuesday July 22, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
This session highlights cutting-edge applications of AI and ML designed to deliver actionable insights and practical solutions in Earth Science. Speakers will present diverse approaches, including the development of a generative AI-driven dashboard that provides real-time flooding analysis in Central Appalachia, employing GeoAI to assess environmental perceptions using street view imagery, and synthesizing recent advancements from the ESIP Machine Learning Cluster's research initiatives. Attendees will gain a deeper understanding of how advanced AI methodologies can be effectively implemented to address complex environmental challenges, support decision-making processes, and improve community resilience.

Value to Session Participants: Explore actionable innovations, strengthening cross-cluster collaboration, enhance emergency response capabilities.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: None.
Speakers
avatar for Ziheng Sun

Ziheng Sun

Research Associate Prof, George Mason University
My research interests are mainly on geospatial cyberinfrastructure and machine learning in atmospheric and agricultural sciences.
Tuesday July 22, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA
 
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