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GNS Healthcare Expands Membership at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Supercomputing Center To Advance Big Data Healthcare Solutions
Leading Healthcare Analytics Company To Broaden
Use of High Performance Computing Resources at
Rensselaer
Leading “big data” analytics firm GNS Healthcare has signed
a multi-year agreement to extend and expand its membership with
the Computational Center for
Nanotechnology Innovations (CCNI) at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute. The agreement enables GNS to continue and grow
its use of CCNI’s massively parallel computational resources to
directly support its research and operations.
CCNI is a $100 million partnership between Rensselaer, IBM,
and New York state. The center houses one of the world’s most
powerful university-based supercomputers and is a national
leader in promoting the application of high-performance
computing in industry. CCNI supports a network of more than 700
researchers in academia and industry across a diverse spectrum
of disciplines.
“One of our primary goals as a public-private partnership is
to support economic growth through the use of high-performance
computing and we’re delighted that GNS will continue to have
access to the computing power it needs to innovate, grow, and
move into new business areas,” said CCNI Director James
Myers.
“GNS has partnered with CCNI since 2007 to drive healthcare
innovation through the application of GNS’s
supercomputer-driven REFS modeling and simulation platform
using CCNI’s high-performance computing. Having access to one
of the world’s largest supercomputing resources and working
with the expert staff at CCNI for many years has allowed us to
deliver results from ‘big data’ that would not have been
possible using solely internal computing resources. Today, the
flexibility that CCNI provides as our business continues to
rapidly grow enables us to seamlessly tackle our partners’
biggest challenges,” said Thomas A. Neyarapally, GNS Healthcare senior
vice president, corporate development.
In June 2011, GNS Healthcare became one of 10 companies
whose success in leveraging high-performance computing was
documented through a
case study developed jointly by the Council on Competitiveness
and the Defense Advanced Projects Research Agency (DARPA). GNS
employs its proprietary machine learning algorithms in the REFS
technology platform on massively parallel supercomputers to
analyze vast amounts of biomedical information, discovering new
insights into the complex, clinical causes of human disease,
and new opportunities for diagnosis and treatment. The
company’s technology has helped its collaborators improve
treatment of major diseases including multiple sclerosis and
cancer and reduce instances of harmful drug interactions for
patients taking medicine.
“We are laser-focused on delivering value to our industrial
partners and helping them achieve their strategic research
goals by leveraging CCNI’s expertise, software, and computing
resources,” Myers said. “With GNS, which itself is a provider
of software and solutions to the medical and pharmaceutical
communities, we act as a resource provider. They see us as a
cloud —a powerful one with a supercomputer in it—that lets them
concentrate on their business rather than worrying about the
capital costs and complexities of running a supercomputer on
their own.”
CCNI opened its doors in 2007 with more than 100 teraflops
of computing power, and today supports a broad range of
at-scale modeling, simulation, and analysis research across a
spectrum of science and engineering disciplines. The center is
committed to hastening the advance of ever-shrinking computer
chips and other devices that are designed and manufactured by
the micro- and nanoelectronics industry and to driving the
academic and industrial adoption of computationally and
data-intensive techniques. Over the last five years, more than
700 researchers from 50 universities, companies, and government
laboratories have run high-performance science and engineering
applications at CCNI.
Last year, Rensselaer won a $2.65 million
grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to
purchase, install, and run a new balanced, green supercomputing
system at CCNI designed to support the development of
next-generation computational and data-intensive applications.
The new system is expected to be comprised of a powerful IBM
Blue Gene/Q supercomputer along with a multiterabyte memory
(RAM) storage accelerator, petascale disk storage, rendering
cluster, and remote display wall systems. The new system will
be a national resource for academic and industrial researchers
across many different disciplines.
For more information on CNNI at Rensselaer, visit:
Rensselaer Computational Center for Nanotechnology
Innovations (CCNI)
http://www.rpi.edu/research/ccni/
Innovating New Ways To Share and Preserve Scientific Data on
Sustainability
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2952
New Supercomputer To Boost Rensselaer Leadership in
High-Performance Computing
http://www.rpi.edu/about/inside/issue/v5n14/supercomputer.html
Rensselaer Supercomputer Director Named to National
Initiative on High Performance Computing
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2872
Rensselaer Alumni Magazine: SuperPower
http://www.rpi.edu/magazine/fall2007/superpower-1.html
About REFS
REFS (Reverse Engineering-Forward Simulation) is comprised
of integrated machine learning algorithms and software that
extract causal relationships from complex, multidimensional
data and enable the simulation of billions of ‘what if?’
hypotheses to explore novel unseen conditions and predictions
forward in time. This model-centric discovery and simulation
approach represents a paradigm shift in data analysis,
leapfrogging existing approaches such as high-dimensional
pattern matching.
About GNS Healthcare
GNS Healthcare is a “Big Data” analytics company that has
developed a scalable approach for the discovery of what works
in healthcare, and for whom. GNS Healthcare’s analytics
solutions are being applied across the healthcare industry:
from pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, health plans
and hospitals, to integrated delivery systems, Pharmacy
Benefits Managers (PBMs), and Accountable Care Organizations
(ACOs). Whether your organization is delivering care or
developing personalized therapies and diagnostics, GNS
Healthcare can help you discover the knowledge you need to
match patients with treatments that work.
For more information on GNS Healthcare, visit: http://www.gnshealthcare.com/.
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Published
June 5,
2012 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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