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“A Brief Overview of Calit2” Visit from LEAD San Diego To Calit2’s Qualcomm Institute UC San Diego April 4, 2017 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology Harry E. Gruber Professor, Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering Jacobs School of Engineering, UCSD http://lsmarr.calit2.net 1
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A Brief Overview of Calit2

Jan 22, 2018

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Page 1: A Brief Overview of Calit2

“A Brief Overview of Calit2”

Visit from LEAD San Diego

To Calit2’s Qualcomm Institute

UC San Diego

April 4, 2017

Dr. Larry Smarr

Director, California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology

Harry E. Gruber Professor,

Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering

Jacobs School of Engineering, UCSD

http://lsmarr.calit2.net1

Page 2: A Brief Overview of Calit2

California’s Institutes for Science and Innovation

A Bold Experiment in Collaborative Research

UCSBUCLA

California

NanoSystems Institute

UCSFUCB

California Institute for Bioengineering,

Biotechnology,

and Quantitative Biomedical Research

UCI

UCSD

California Institute for

Telecommunications and

Information Technology

Center for

Information Technology Research

in the Interest of Society

UCSC

UCDUCM

www.ucop.edu/california-institutes

Launched in

2000

Page 3: A Brief Overview of Calit2

Two Calit2 Buildings Provide

New Laboratories for “Living in the Future”

• “Convergence” Laboratory Facilities

– Nanotech, BioMEMS, Chips, Radio, Photonics

– Virtual Reality, Digital Cinema, HDTV, Gaming

• Over 1000 Researchers in Two Buildings

– Linked via Dedicated Optical Networks

UC Irvine

$100M From State for New Facilities

UC San Diego

2005

Page 4: A Brief Overview of Calit2

A Broad Partnership Response

from the Private Sector

Akamai

Boeing

Broadcom

AMCC

CAIMIS

Compaq

Conexant

Copper Mountain

Emulex

Enterprise Partners VC

Entropia

Ericsson

Global Photon

IBM

IdeaEdge Ventures

Intersil

Irvine Sensors

Leap Wireless

Litton Industries

MedExpert

Merck

Microsoft

Mission Ventures

NCR

Newport Corporation

Orincon

Panoram Technologies

Printronix

QUALCOMM

Quantum

R.W. Johnson Pharmaceutical RI

SAIC

SciFrame

Seagate Storage

Silicon Wave

Sony

STMicroelectronics

Sun Microsystems

TeraBurst Networks

Texas Instruments

UCSD Healthcare

The Unwired Fund

WebEx

Computers

Communications

Software

Sensors

Biomedical

Startups

Venture Firms

Large Partners

>$10M Over 4 Years

$140 M Match From Industry

Calit2 Slide

2001

Page 5: A Brief Overview of Calit2

Elements of the

Cal -(IT)2 Industrial Partnerships

• Endowed Chairs for Professors

• Start-Up Support for Young Faculty

• Graduate Student Fellowships

• Research and Academic Professionals

• Sponsored Research Programs

• Equipment Donations for Cal-(IT)2 and Campus

• Named Laboratories in new Institute Buildings

• Pro Bono Services and Software

Calit2 Slide

2001

Page 6: A Brief Overview of Calit2

Calit2 Has Created an University Engagement Umbrella for SSC Pacific—

FY09 Projects

• Neurocognitive and Physiological Effects of Fatigue and Other Stressors

– Camellia Clark. Sept. 2007- Dec. 2008, $35,000

• RF-VLSI: Development of Silicon-Based 64-Element Phased Arrays – Gabriel Rebeiz. Feb. 2008 - Feb. 2009, $150,000

• Seminar on Service Oriented Architecture Research Issues

– Ingolf Krueger. Feb. 2008 – Sept. 2008, $25,000

• Chip-Scale Chirped Bragg Gratings for RF Photonics

– Shaya Fainman. Mar. 2008 – Dec. 2008, $60,000

• A Microwave-Based Gamma-Ray Spectrometer

– Gabriel Rebeiz. Aug. 2008 – Aug. 2009, $120,000

• Low Noise Figure Analog Fiber Link

– Paul Yu. May 2008 – May 2009, $150,000

• Parametric Channelizer & Fast Synthetic Filtering Device

– Stojan Radic. Jun. 2009 – Mar. 2010, $418,000

• Analysis of Distributed Fusion Under Intermittent Communications Using a Biologically Inspired Network Model

– Gabriel Silva. Sept. 2009 – Dec. 2009, $40,000

The ongoing Calit2-SSC Pacific Cooperative Agreement

During 2003 – 2009, 48 projects totaling $4M

Page 7: A Brief Overview of Calit2

The Challenge of Managing

an Ecology of Federal Grants

Calit2 Review Report: Appendix A

Page 8: A Brief Overview of Calit2

Creating a Digital “Mirror World”:

Interactive Virtual Reality of San Diego County

0.5 meter image resolution.

2meter resolution elevation

Page 9: A Brief Overview of Calit2

All Meteorological Stations Are Represented in Realtime:

Wind Direction, Velocity, and Temperature

Source: Jessica Block, Calit2

Page 10: A Brief Overview of Calit2
Page 11: A Brief Overview of Calit2

3D Volumetric Visualization From MRI

In Calit2 Virtual Reality StarCAVE

3D Volumetric

Visualization

Created by

Calit2’s Jurgen

Schulze

from January

2012 MRI

Page 12: A Brief Overview of Calit2

Building a Global Collaboratorium:

India’s President Kalam Gives Lecture to Calit2

May 31, 2006

Page 13: A Brief Overview of Calit2

Next Step: The Pacific Research Platform Creates

a Regional End-to-End Science-Driven “Big Data Superhighway” System

NSF CC*DNI Grant

$5M 10/2015-10/2020

PI: Larry Smarr, UC San Diego Calit2

Co-Pis:

• Camille Crittenden, UC Berkeley CITRIS,

• Tom DeFanti, UC San Diego Calit2,

• Philip Papadopoulos, UCSD SDSC,

• Frank Wuerthwein, UCSD Physics and SDSC

Page 14: A Brief Overview of Calit2

UC San Diego Creates

Center for Brain Activity Mapping http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/feature/uc_san_diego_creates_center_for_brain_activity_mapping

From left, Nick Spitzer, Ralph Greenspan, and Terry Sejnowski.

Photos by Erik Jepsen/UC San Diego Publications

May 16, 2013

Page 15: A Brief Overview of Calit2

Reverse Engineering of the Brain:

Large Scale Microscopy of Mammal Brains Reveals Complex Connectivity

Neuron

Cell Bodies

Neuronal Dendritic

Overlap Region

Source: Rat Cerebellum Image, Mark Ellisman, UCSD

Page 16: A Brief Overview of Calit2

The Rise of Brain-Inspired Computers:

Left & Right Brain Computing: Arithmetic vs. Pattern Recognition

Adapted from D-Wave

Page 17: A Brief Overview of Calit2

Calit2’s Qualcomm Institute Has Established a Pattern Recognition Lab

For Machine Learning on non-von Neumann Processors

“On the drawing board are collections of 64, 256, 1024, and 4096 chips.

‘It’s only limited by money, not imagination,’ Modha says.”

Source: Dr. Dharmendra Modha

Founding Director, IBM Cognitive Computing Group

August 8, 2014

UCSD ECE Professor Ken Kreutz-Delgado Brings

the IBM TrueNorth Chip

to Start Calit2’s Qualcomm Institute

Pattern Recognition Laboratory

September 16, 2015

Page 18: A Brief Overview of Calit2

New Brain-Inspired Non-von Neumann Processors Are Emerging:

KnuEdge Has Provided Processor to Calit2’s PRL

www.tomshardware.com/news/knuedge-announces-knuverse-and-knupath,31981.html

www.calit2.net/newsroom/release.php?id=2704

“KnuEdge and Calit2 have worked together since the early days of

the KnuEdge LambdaFabricprocessor, when key

personnel and technology from UC San Diego

provided the genesis for the first processor design.”

www.calit2.net/newsroom/release.php?id=2726

June 6, 2016

Page 19: A Brief Overview of Calit2

Independent Analysis of Calit2:

Harvard Business School’s Case Study on Calit2

June 10, 2014