D
Darren Hardy
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 22
Citations - 2148
Darren Hardy is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: The Internet & Information system. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 22 publications receiving 2025 citations. Previous affiliations of Darren Hardy include University of Colorado Boulder & University of California, Santa Barbara.
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Journal ArticleDOI
An index to assess the health and benefits of the global ocean
Benjamin S. Halpern,Catherine Longo,Darren Hardy,Karen L. McLeod,Jameal F. Samhouri,Steven K. Katona,Kristin M. Kleisner,Sarah E. Lester,Jennifer K. O'Leary,Marla Ranelletti,Andrew Rosenberg,Courtney Scarborough,Elizabeth R. Selig,Benjamin D. Best,Daniel R. Brumbaugh,F. Stuart Chapin,Larry B. Crowder,Kendra L. Daly,Scott C. Doney,Cristiane T. Elfes,Cristiane T. Elfes,Michael J. Fogarty,Steven D. Gaines,Kelsey I. Jacobsen,Leah Bunce Karrer,Heather M. Leslie,Elizabeth Neeley,Daniel Pauly,Stephen Polasky,Bud Ris,Kevin St. Martin,Gregory S. Stone,U. Rashid Sumaila,Dirk Zeller +33 more
TL;DR: An index comprising ten diverse public goals for a healthy coupled human–ocean system and calculated the index for every coastal country provides a powerful tool to raise public awareness, direct resource management, improve policy and prioritize scientific research.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Harvest information discovery and access system
TL;DR: Harvest as mentioned in this paper is a system that provides a scalable, customizable architecture for gathering, indexing, caching, replicating, and accessing Internet information, which can be used to collect, index, and extract data from the Internet.
ReportDOI
Harvest: A Scalable, Customizable Discovery and Access System
TL;DR: This paper introduces Harvest, a system that provides a set of customizable tools for gathering information from diverse repositories, building topic-specific content indexes, flexibly searching the indexes, widely replicating them, and caching objects as they are retrieved across the Internet.
Journal ArticleDOI
Volunteered geographic information production as a spatial process
TL;DR: A spatial data model and collection methods to study VGI in systems that may not explicitly support geographic data; quantitative methods for measuring distance between online authors and articles; and empirical evidence that the spatial processes of anonymous contributors fit an exponential distance decay model.