Aug 11, 2020
Ph.D. Tomas Plankis Vilnius University
Faculty of Mathema/cs and Informa/cs
Supercomputer
SGI Altix 4700 Sun Fire X4100 New supercomputer (1500 cores, 600 TB) Distributed computing network Software
“Personnel” Scientists Students
We have a lot high class specialists to do research in many different fields
A lot of students, who could help in research and experiments
A lot of students, who could be teached the newest knowledge
Short about... myself
6 years experience in healthcare one of the developers of patients management system experience in data management experience in medical systems experience in interoperability
Doctor’s needs
Medical Systems
X‐ray MRI (magnetic resonance imaging)
ECG (electrocardiography) EEG (electroencephalography)
Microscopy etc...
Data Analysis
Analyse tests’ data and give some preliminary conclusions
Analyse patients records to show possible health problems in the future or with the prescription
Repository of Knowledge and
Data Access
To be able to access all new knowledge in an instant To have some sort of registry To be able to use gathered information directly for teaching or learning purposes
Etc.
GRID as a Distributed System
GRID ‐ the combination of computer resources from multiple administrative domains to reach a common goal
Grids are a form of distributed computing whereby a “super virtual computer” is composed of many networked computers acting together to perform very large tasks
What can we have from GRIDS? We can have resources on demand. For example we can get huge computational power when we need it.
We can create a “virtual network” to exchange data between health care facilities. That means, that we do not need to store all medical records about one pacient in one “center”, but rather we can access it if we need it. What’s more important, we don’t need to know where that data is. This solves few problems like: huge storages or slow obtaining of data.
What do we have?
National Health Insurance Fund
What can we have?
GRID
Anonymization
Repository (Cloud)
Analytical server
(Supercomputer)
Deanonymization
Private and everyday usage
Data access for curing, teaching or learning, trauma registries,
etc.