International conference
“e-Infrastructures for excellent science
in Southeast Europe and Eastern Mediterranean”
15-16 May 2018, Sofia Bulgaria
“e-Infrastructures for excellent science in Southeast Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean” conference will be held in Sofia, Bulgaria, on 15-16 May 2018 in Grand Hotel Sofia. The conference will be a unique opportunity for regional scientists to showcase their work in selected research fields relevant for the region, as well as for presenting the latest achievements resulting from the collaboration of countries in the region of Southeast Europe and Eastern Mediterranean in the area of e-Infrastructures and their use. The conference will gather e-Infrastructure providers, scientists and researchers, and the policy makers from the region and beyond.
The conference program will be divided in two main parts: in the first part an overview of the history, present status and perspectives of the regional e-Infrastructure collaboration will be given, including the analysis of the developments, connection with European programmes and initiatives, regional contribution to the European goals, etc. In the second part, the scientific results in the areas of climatology, life sciences and digital cultural heritage, achieved using the integrated regional e-Infrastructure platform, will be presented.
For more information about the conference, please visit:
https://vi-seem.eu/regional-conference. |
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VI-SEEM 3rd call for proposals for project access to services and supporting infrastructures
Following two successful calls for project access to the VI-SEEM services and the associated infrastructure, VI-SEEM opens its 3rd call in February, addressing scientists and researchers that work in academic and research institutions in the region of Southeastern Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean in the fields of life sciences, digital cultural heritage and climate.
The applicants can use a simple form and rely on the peer-review process which will ensure high quality of accepted applications. For the applications that meet the selection criteria and are approved, previously established and well-tested procedures for deployment and support within the VI-SEEM Virtual Research Environment will be followed.
To date, VI-SEEM has supported 38 research projects, out of which 15 were related to climate research, 12 to life sciences, and 11 to cultural heritage. In total, 18 million CPU-hours, 5 million GPU-hours, 1 million Xeon Phi-hours, 80 Cloud virtual machines, and 100 TB of storage space has been offered to the communities.
The VI-SEEM is announced at: https://vi-seem.eu/3rd-call/. Join us and become a part of a unique Virtual Research Environment that improves research productivity and competitiveness on the pan-European level! |
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VI-SEEM continuous open call for SMEs: ecouraging collaboration between the Industry and Scientific Communities
VI-SEEM engagement with industry and external scientific communities is accelerating through its continuous SME Call (https://vi-seem.eu/2017/11/15/sme-call/). Launched in November 2017, the call supports partnerships involving SMEs and research institutions of South Eastern Europe and Eastern Mediterranean, through the development of projects using the VI-SEEM services. The access team is available to answer any questions from the prospective users while the call is open, at: service-access@lists.vi-seem.eu.
The application procedure for access to the services and underlying computational and storage resources through the SME call is simple: it starts with a submission of a proposal at any time, via an application form that takes no more than half an hour to fill in. After passing the completeness and eligibility review, which requires that at most 100,000 CPU core hours or 6,500 GPU or Phi node hours are requested, the application goes through a technical evaluation, based on which the final decision on resource allocation is made.
Access to the services and resources offered by the VI-SEEM VRE (https://services.vi-seem.eu) is awarded for a maximum period of 3 months, while access to the data repository service might be granted for up to 12 months.
Applications will be accepted until the end of May 2018. |
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CSAD: The Centre for the Study of Ancient Documents
The Centre for the Study of Ancient Documents was established in 1995 under the auspices of Oxford University’s Faculty of Literae Humaniores to provide a focus for the study of ancient documents. Over the last six years it has developed into a research centre of national and international importance.
The Centre provides a home for Oxford University’s epigraphical archive, which includes one of the largest collections of squeezes (paper impressions) of Greek inscriptions in the world, together with the Haverfield archive of Roman inscriptions from Britain, and a substantial photographic collection. The strengths of the epigraphical archive lie in its broad coverage of early Greek inscriptions, Attic epigraphy and the Hellenistic world. Individual sites well represented in the archive include Chios, Samos, Priene, Rhodes, and Samothrace. The material in the archive is currently being reorganised and catalogued.
The Center shares through VI-SEEM Clowder inscriptions of Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt namely inscribed monuments in Greek, Latin and Egyptian, from Roman Egypt as well as RTI inscriptions such as various examples of RTI imaging from museum objects.
Clowder is a research data management system deployed to support the VI-SEEM digital cultural heritage community by being able to handle any data format. Clowder provides three major extension points: pre-processing, processing and previewing. Users can upload, download, search, visualize and get various information about cultural heritage data in the region.
The south front of Kingston Lacy with the Philae obelisk on the lawn. Philae obelisk is an example of an ancient monument which has been inscripted through Reflectance Transformation Imaging. |
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DICOM: collecting, processing and visualizing medical images online
In the last decade medical institutions have been facing the challenge of storage and visualization of medical images collected by various medical equipment. At the same time, providing the scientific community and Institutions access to medical datasets and ensuring in parallel personal medical data protection requires a state-of-the-art technological solution. DICOM Network project is developed for tackling such issues for different actors in the system based on various customized roles.
DICOM is a service that aids the collection, process and visualization of medical images online. It consists of the DICOM Portal, a front-end user interface for patients, doctors and scientists, the DICOM Server, which collects and archives images to DICOM portal for online access, and the DICOM Viewer for visualization, 3D modelling and medical image editing.
The project is based on a number of self-installed components that are built using a number of modules. Assembling of components and modules provides a flexible architecture of the DICOM “Network” that is consolidated by DICOM DATA Interface into a radiology tests database.
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Parallel wind simulation speedup using openFOAM
Wind simulation over mountainous regions is of great interest for planning of human activities, in particular for green energy production with wind farms. The Polytechnic University of Tirana (UPT) performs wind simulations over rugged terrain in regional scales, using the OpenFOAM software. The mountainous area that includes Albania was selected as the terrain model, obtained from NASA SRTM Digital Elevation Model.
The experiments were carried out in three parallel systems aiming at the evaluation of runtime requirements as a preparatory phase for running it in the VI-SEEM Virtual Research Environment: the first in the Faculty of Information Technology of UPT with dual Intel(R) Xeon(R) E5506 processors, 2GB RAM per node and 1 GB switch, the second – HPC Cluster with non-blocking DDR Infiniband with dual Intel(R) Xeon(R) X5560 and 24 GB RAM per node, and the third — the supercomputer system Avitohol with dual Intel(R) Xeon(R) E5-2650v2, non-blocking InfiniBand FDR and 64 GB RAM per node, both in the Institute of Information and Communication Technologies, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences.
The results of the experiment show the importance of such simulations for planning of wind energy farms, and for the air transport. The use of OpenFOAM for wind simulation models of medium resolution (spatial discretization steps 10km-1km) over rugged mountainous regional area of Albania and surroundings was possible in the HPC Avitohol shystem using reasonable resources. Besides the runtime, another limitation was the virtual memory in levels of 10-30 GB for medium sized models, requested by preparatory modules blockMesh, decomposePar, and reconstructPar. An optimistic extrapolation of the runtime for the model with resolution 100m of spatial discretization step using up to 640 parallel processes resulted up to 4 months, not considering limitations due to virtual memory and degeneration of parallelization efficiency.
North-South wind (bottom) in altitude 1,500m (left), East-West component (center), and vertical component (right)
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