Applications:
CAHPC SHOWCASES FLASH CYBER-INFRASTRUCTURE TOOLS
The The Center for Applied High Performance Computing (CAHPC) based at Howard
University in Washington, D.C., showcased a number of research projects
related to high performance computing and Cyber-infrastructure at SC2004. But
MammoData, a Web-accessible Grid tool for collaborative breast cancer
diagnosis, made an immediate impression on spectators, due in part, to a
flashy Web-accessible user interface. A far cry from a typical hum-drum
research tool interface, MammoData's interface was created in Macromedia
Flash, the same technology that drives many online interactive games (and
lengthy Web site intros), so the interface response is instantaneous.
With the tool, doctors, researchers, and educators have the ability to share
cases, make annotations, file a diagnosis, request consults, or request
assistance from expert systems, and request similar cases. The system is built
on top of the Globus GT3 and utilizes SDSC's SRB for collections-based
storage.
"Up until now much of our research under this project has been focused on the
component technologies (scanning, detection, segmentation, methods of
annotation) and to building the database to hold hundreds of detailed cases of
African American Women." explained Mohamed Chouikha, the CAHPC director, and
chair of the Howard University's electrical and computer engineering
department. "But now we are committed to assembling our best technologies into
a federated system that can actually benefit someone. There are plenty of new
problems to solve once you start building things." Ultimately those problems
will include HIPAA regulations, which restrict how patient data can be
handled. Currently the special demo version of the system that was displayed
contains only publicly available cases without the detailed patient data
necessary to make use of much of the system's capabilities.
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