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December 2003
By Cassie
Ferguson
When several hospitals in Taiwan
were quarantined during the SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome)
epidemic, doctors and other medical professionals were suddenly
cut off from the rest of the world. Quarantined
physicians could no longer seek
help from specialists at other institutions, and hospital staffs
and patients were unable to see their families. On May 13, 2003,
the World Health Organization reported that the viral respiratory
illness had infected 7548 people worldwide, killing 573.
Early on May 15, 2003, Fang-Pang
Lin of the Taiwan's National Center for High-performance Computing
(NCHC) sent a request for immediate technical assistance to
Peter Arzberger, chair of the Pacific Rim Application and Grid
Middleware Assembly (PRAGMA) Steering Committee, and several
other members of that committee. Teri Simas, PRAGMA program
manager, forwarded the message to the rest of the PRAGMA members,
an international group of researchers whose communications are
usually focused on the establishment and promotion of grids
and applications. From there, the request spread to the Global
Grid Forum and the Access Grid Community.
Almost immediately, offers to assist
poured in from around the world, with volunteers ready to provide
gear, remote expertise, and Chinese-speaking support staff.
In less than 12 hours, Access Grid technology was deployed from
the U.S. to Taiwan.
On the evening of May 17, an emergency
video teleconference was held to review the logistics for implementation
of the Access Grid network within three Taiwanese hospitals.
The list was later expanded to seven sites. The goal was to
set up a network-based collaboration environment using the Access
Grid, which would extend standard video- and teleconferencing
and allow physicians to share detailed x-ray images, patient
data and other information in online meetings among several
sites. The Access Grid would also host private virtual rooms
for patients or hospital staff to visit with family members.
By May 20, Access Grid nodes had
been delivered to San-Chung and Chang-Gung Hospitals. On May
21, they had been installed. The network connection between
Jen-Ai Hospital and NCHC was successfully tested on May 22,
and on May 29, nodes were established in Jen-Ai Hospital and
in Taiwan's Center for Disease Control. Chung-Hwa Telecom deployed
a dedicated backbone network with a one Gbps bandwidth.
"Thanks to PRAGMA, an alliance
was been formed," said Lin, director of the NCHC's grid computing
division. "NCHC had a responsibility to assist in handling this
arduous task, and with assistance offered from the international
grid community, we contributed to the nationwide call to assist
in fighting the disease, relieving the epidemic, and ultimately
saving many lives."
PROMOTING THE GRID
While a group of computational
scientists may seem like unlikely candidates for a team combating
a deadly epidemic, it may be even more unusual that those researchers,
from institutions worldwide, united without regard to political
or scientific boundaries to achieve a common goal in record
time. Arzberger, director of Life Sciences Initiatives at the
University of California, San Diego (UCSD), said that kind of
effort represents the essence of PRAGMA (www.pragma-grid.net),
which includes members from 18 institutions and organizations
across the Pacific Rim.
PRAGMA was founded as an open organization
with the goals of establishing sustained collaborations and
advancing the use of the computational grid among a community
of investigators at leading research institutions across the
Pacific Rim. According to Arzberger, "PRAGMA was founded on
the premise that the conduct of science is global and more examples
arise that point to the challenges that must be faced internationally;
that the grid promises to revolutionize science as much as networking
has done to our daily activities; and that the grid is still
too difficult to use by most researchers."
In March 2002, PRAGMA held its
inaugural workshop in San Diego, establishing the initial governance
and community of the effort along with opening discussion about
which projects to address. The meeting chair, Philip Papadopoulos,
who is director of SDSC's Grid and Cluster Computing program
and co-PI on the National Science Foundation (NSF) PRAGMA awards,
brought up the central issues of the conference: to explore
the resources, software, and policy related to a pan-Pacific
grid and what can be done to make the grid useful for applications.
"Collaboration is the key to success.
With PRAGMA, we are trying to build a community that focuses
on the needs of the applications," Papadopoulos said. As part
of the effort to promote the international construction and
use of the grid, PRAGMA recognizes that no one institution or
economic entity has all of the talent or all of the resources
to do this.
At the conclusion of the workshop,
Arzberger wrote a note to thank the participants, who had actively
participated in presentations and working group planning sessions.
"There is a Chinese saying that happiness is something to do,
someone to love, something to hope for. With a broad interpretation,
we should feel happy about what we have accomplished in a short
period of time. We have taken the first step, and we will be
challenging each other to take subsequent steps to create sustainable
collaborations."
HEADLINES AND SCIENCE
During that first workshop, Satoshi
Matsuoka of the Global Scientific Information and Computing
Center at the Tokyo Institute of Technology in Japan referred
to building a Pacific Rim research grid in terms of the movie,
Field of Dreams, and said, "If we build it, the scientists will
come."
Less than two years later, scientists
have arrived, with PRAGMA's computing infrastructure having
caught up to its social infrastructure. Its resources have been
used in research that cuts across scientific fields: chemistry,
biology, physics, and medicine. PRAGMA has acted as the catalyst
for scientific and computing accomplishments, which have not
only caught the attention of the research community, but also
made headlines worldwide. In recognition of the success of the
initial PRAGMA effort, in the summer of 2003 the NSF awarded
the program $1.2 million over three years.
Jysoo Lee, deputy chair of the
PRAGMA Steering Committee and head of the Supercomputing Research
Department at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology
Information (KISTI), said, "PRAGMA focuses on real applications
that are critically dependent on grid technology. It complements
other projects in the Asia Pacific grid community."
Among the success stories: In November
2002, researchers at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial
Science and Technology (AIST) set an intercontinental data transfer
record, pushing data from a high-energy physics experiment at
an average speed of 741 Megabits per second over 10,000 kilometers
from the U.S. to Japan. The record was set in the course of
participating in the "Bandwidth Challenge," a networking contest
held as part of SC2002, the annual conference of high performance
computing, held that year in Baltimore.
High-energy physics experimental
data generated by Monte Carlo simulation was distributed to
seven clusters (190 PCs) via a number of high-speed networks,
including two governed by PRAGMA member TransPAC. By conducting
parallel data transmissions between the clusters and sharing
the data between high-speed networks, the researchers were able
to boost the overall data transfer rate. Additionally, it was
the first time that clusters in the U.S. and Japan had been
integrated and a single application used to send multiple terabytes
of data via multiple TCP streams across the Pacific Ocean.
"An important thing to note about
this 'speed record' is that it used the network and attached
clusters in a manner very similar to the way scientists will
actually use these resources," according to TransPAC. "[It]
is an example of how grid computing and high performance networking
will be intimate partners in the future of scientific computation."
The telescience application, demonstrated
at iGRID2002 is a model PRAGMA collaboration. In controlling
a microscope in Osaka from UCSD via portals and the use of new
networking technology of IPv6, PRAGMA extended a long standing
collaboration between these two institutions by involving NCHC
and its expertise in visualization. Grid Datafarm and Data Grid
middleware were involved in the demonstration at iGRID2002,
which took place in Amsterdam. The demonstraton involved machines
on three continents and real-time control of an instrument,
distributed tomographic reconstructions of specimens under the
microscope in Osaka using machines at the three participating
institutions, and visualization of the output. Each participant
contributed to this collaboration and benefited from the expertise
from their collaboration.
NCHC is applying its experiences
in the field of ecology and biodiversity for researchers at
the Taiwan Forestry Research Institute's Fushan Research Station,
to control sensors at Fushan and to share data with their counterparts
worldwide.
PRAGMA has also provided a means
for ecology and biodiversity researchers at the Fushan Research
Station to share data with their counterparts worldwide. In
early 2003, the Taipei Times chronicled the addition of an Ecology-Grid
system (Eco-Grid) to the Taiwan Ecological Research Network
(TERN). Fushan, one of five sites in TERN, is famed for its
pristine rainforest and contains more than one-third of Taiwan's
plant and animal species.
the Taiwan Eco-Grid, which includes
remote high-resolution cameras, sound recorders, and wireless
sensors, will capture information on animal activity and plant
growth, and will be a key to long-term monitoring of soil erosion
and channel sedimentation. The data, which include observations
and research results, are fed to a system set up by PRAGMA member
NCHC under the National Science Council, saving researchers
the time and expense of trekking to remote sites in the 2,700-acre
preserve.
With the help of PRAGMA, the Taiwan
Eco-Grid has been connected, both in terms of a computing grid
and science collaborators, to the international ecology research
community. According to Arzberger, this will allow researchers
to perform comparative studies between sites that would not
have previously been possible.
Chemists, computational chemists,
and computer scientists with PRAGMA members Monash University,
Kasetsart University, Cray Inc., AIST, and SDSC, along with
the Victorian Partnership for Advanced computing, recently collaborated
on a ground-breaking demonstration at the fourth PRAGMA workshop,
held in Melbourne, Australia, in conjunction with the 2003 International
Conference on Computational Science.
As reported in GridToday, the researchers
used a tool called Nimrod/G to distribute the task of processing
a quantum chemical modeling code, GAMESS, to six clusters in
three countries. Running the code overnight, the researchers
calculated a "pseudo-potential," which can ultimately be used
to model large molecular systems such as proteins.
"These results allow us to explore
many more parameter combinations than we had been able to do
in the past," said Wibke Sudholt, a postdoctoral researcher
at SDSC. "Future applications of this technology could range
from understanding complex biochemical reactions, to designing
new drugs, to basic structure-function relationships in materials.
This international example of collaboration has opened up a
new field of inquiry."
PRAGMA members are also participants
in the Encyclopedia of Life (EOL), an ambitious project to catalog
the complete complement of proteins from every living species
in a flexible, powerful reference system available via the Web.
The project draws on the skills of experts in biology, data
and knowledge systems, and grid computing. It also uses some
of the world's most powerful computational resources, potentially
up to 2,416 processors when counting clusters at the three PRAGMA
EOL sites, including NPACI's Blue Horizon and the TeraGrid.
"The genome projects have led to
a lot of new questions, most importantly, 'How can we best use
this sequence information?' " said Philip Bourne, SDSC's director
of Integrative Biosciences and a UCSD professor of pharmacology.
"The Encyclopedia of Life is part of the answer to those questions.
The EOL will permit comparative proteomics'comparison of proteins
within and between species. This will lead to identification
of new functions for these proteins and, in the best case, highlight
potential new drug targets. At the very least we will have an
encyclopedic reference of existing proteins that will educate
a broad community in the role of these proteins in living systems."
In February 2003, the Bioinformatics
Institute of Singapore became the first international site to
use protein annotation software developed at SDSC to completely
process the genome of the Tiger Pufferfish, or Takifugu rubripes.
Since then, the Tokyo Institute of Technology has joined the
project. As of September 2003, the EOL contained the annotated
proteomes of 140 species out of a potential 1,000 for which
full or partial genomes are publicly available.
INTERNATIONAL MODEL
Such science vignettes, along with
the dramatic story of the SARS Grid, are an indication of the
potential created by PRAGMA. "The grid will allow researchers
to focus on collaborative technologies and efforts, which must
be developed in an international context," said William Chang,
program manager in the NSF's Office of International Science
and Engineering. "The nature of the PRAGMA project, its openness,
broad geographical scope, focus on standard technologies and
software, should allow the lessons learned within the targeted
scientific communities to be transferred to other research users
of grid technologies and infrastructure, as well as across national
and political boundaries."
PRAGMA communicates and disseminates
the results of its efforts though activities that include a
series of member workshops hosted by participant sites. The
first four meetings were held in San Diego, hosted by SDSC and
UCSD; the meeting in Seoul was hosted by KISTI; the meeting
in Fukuoka was hosted by AIST in conjunction with the Asia-Pacific
Advanced Network; and the Melbourne meeting was hosted by Monash
University and the Australia Partnership for Advanced Computing.
Future meetings are planned in Hsinchu, Taiwan, in October 2003
to be hosted by NCHC, and in Beijing in May 2004 to be hosted
by the Computer Network Information Center of the Chinese Academy
of Sciences.
Even at the first meeting, it became
clear that if PRAGMA were to be long-lived, it would be necessary
to lay out a model for interaction. Over the first 10 months,
PRAGMA evolved operating principles and procedures that guide
decision-making processes and the commitments of its members,
as well as growth of PRAGMA by the addition of new members.
At the fourth workshop, several new members joined PRAGMA, notably
Academia Sinica Computing Centre and Kasetsart University. Subsequently,
a partnership between the Asia-Pacific Advanced Network and
PRAGMA was formalized, drawing upon the mutual interests of
both groups in networking and grid, as well as overlapping interest
in the area of natural resources. Finally, PRAGMA extended its
model of international research collaborations to include industry.
In September 2003, PRAGMA initiated an Industrial Affiliate
program to encourage mutually beneficial collaborations between
industry and the research community, with Cray Inc., as its
first member.
"Cray is interested in understanding
the needs of the emerging grid community and the applications
for this new technology," said Richard Russell, Cray's vice
president of Asia-Pacific Sales. "We feel that our alliance
with PRAGMA will help us to better understand the grid-technology
needs of our customers. It also presents the opportunity to
demonstrate how Cray systems can advance scientific progress,
while actively sponsoring development of international applications
and collaborations."
Having set a new standard in international
collaborations, PRAGMA may evolve into a model for efforts beyond
grids and science. Arzberger said, "We hope that PRAGMA will
inspire other international collaborations and promote new means
to nurture, sustain, and explain those collaborations in order
that we as a global society can address critical global issues
and improve economic growth, quality of life, and the health
of our planet."
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