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            "result_type": "Visualization",
            "release_date": "1997-11-01T12:00:00-05:00",
            "title": "Images of Earth and Space: SC97 Edition",
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            "title": "The HoloGlobe Project (Version 2)",
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            "title": "The HoloGlobe Project (Version 1)",
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            "title": "The HoloGlobe Project (Version 3)",
            "description": "These animations were produced for the Smithsonian Institution's HoloGlobe Exhibit which opened to the public on August 10, 1996 at the Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC. The various data sets show progressive global change mapped onto a rotating globe and projected into space to create a holographic image of the Earth. The exhibit shows that Earth's atmosphere, hydrosphere, geosphere, and biosphere are dynamic, changing on timescales of days, minutes, or even seconds. The exhibit has since been relocated to the west coast. This is a revised version from Animation #116 [The HoloGlobe Project (version 2)]. || ",
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            "title": "Skeletal Modeling Dynamic Simulation: The Runner",
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            "title": "Restorer: Four Color Chart",
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            "title": "Restorer: An Example of Constant Data Gaps",
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            "title": "Restorer: An Example of Time-varying Data Gaps",
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            "title": "Restorer: An Example with Ozone Data",
            "description": "Restorer is a visualization technique for indicating the location of missing data in a scientific visualization.  Rather than filling missing data regions with interpolated data colored with the same scale as real data or simply leaving such regions empty, the restorer technique fills the regions with interpolated data colored with a color table with only luminance values.  This technique allows missing data to be indicated clearly without distracting from the content of the real data. || ",
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