http://unisci.com/stories/20014/1018015.htm
18-Oct-2001
The National Center for Research
Resources (NCRR), a component of the National Institutes of Health, has
awarded more than $20 million to a consortium of universities coordinated
by the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) to build the first nationwide
high-performance computer environment to study diseases of the brain.
Researchers linked over a high-speed
network will share high-resolution animal and human brain images to allow
analysis and comparison at many different scales. These capabilities will
be the means for cross-institutional integration of data and expertise
that can advance research on such brain-related diseases as multiple sclerosis,
schizophrenia, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease.
"Biomedical research is undergoing
a rapid transformation that can be traced to the explosion in the size
of data sets ranging from DNA and protein sequences to high-resolution
images mapping the architecture of cellular components, cells, tissues,
organs, and whole organisms," said Judith Vaitukaitis, director of NCRR.
"Information technology is becoming essential for management and analysis
of these data."
The Biomedical Informatics Research
Network (BIRN), will be the nation's first test bed for sharing and mining
data effectively in a site-independent manner for both basic and clinical
research. BIRN will enable researchers to put into practice a multi-institutional,
collaborative, technology-enabled approach that will be key to progress
in neuroscience and medical science generally.
The BIRN project will share digital
magnetic resonance images (MRI) and advanced 3-D microscope images using
high-bandwidth networking technologies. They will also share related genomic,
structural, and gene expression data. Eventually, BIRN capabilities will
scale across additional data repositories, resource centers, and regional
core facilities.
"BIRN will create an environment
for organizing and presenting data in a way that makes it accessible and
useful to other researchers," said Mark Ellisman, director of the UCSD
Center for Research on Biological Structure (CRBS) and principal investigator
for the BIRN Coordinating Center. "All of us will be able to study linkages
between animal models of human diseases and data from patients suffering
with these diseases. We will establish a testbed to determine the software
and hardware requirements for achieving meaningful access to shared databases.
Special attention must be given to issues of reliability, confidentiality,
quality of service, scalability and data ownership."
UCSD will establish the Coordinating
Center for the national BIRN project with information technology contributions
from the NSF-supported National Partnership for Advanced Computational
Infrastructure (NPACI), the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC), and
the newly formed California Institute for Telecommunications and Information
Technology [Cal-(IT)²].
BIRN is a major extension of a current
grant to the NCRR's National Biomedical Computational Resource (NBCR),
operated by UCSD (through CRBS). NBCR develops and deploys computational
tools to benefit the biomedical community. CRBS will coordinate participation
by the School of Medicine and campus researchers in biomedical areas.
The BIRN Coordinating Center at UCSD
will work with Duke University, Massachusetts General Hospital, Brigham
and Women's Hospital, Caltech, UCSD's School of Medicine, and UCLA to establish
large-scale network connections and data-sharing facilities for the BIRN
research projects.
Investigators at each of these sites
have ongoing studies involving brain imagery. Their objective will be to
raise the statistical accuracy and medical incisiveness of all their experiments
by comparing and contrasting imagery from animal and human subjects.
"The BIRN collaboration depends upon
new technology that will allow this close coupling of such studies for
the first time," Ellisman said. The project will train and encourage researchers
to access and share data from others' experiments in a coordinated way,
and it will mark a new era for information-technology-enabled, multi-institutional
collaborative science, according to Ellisman.
"BIRN will allow research computations
and data analysis to go forward on a scale never before possible," said
Edward Holmes, vice chancellor for health sciences and dean of the UCSD
School of Medicine. "What is particularly exciting is that these steps,
taken for brain research, will build collaborative models for the use of
modern informatics and telescience in all areas of medicine."
Initially, data from ongoing experiments
will be shared among two major BIRN subprojects. The Mouse BIRN Project
is led by G. Allan Johnson, director of the Center for In Vivo Microscopy,
an NCRR Resource at Duke University.
Mouse BIRN will collaborate with
Ellisman's National Center for Microscopy and Imaging Research (also an
NCRR-supported resource at UCSD), the Laboratory of Neuro Imaging directed
by Arthur Toga at UCLA (also an NCRR Resource), and the Biological Imaging
Center's MRI Division directed by Scott Fraser and Russell Jacobs at Caltech's
Beckman Institute.
They will extend studies by using
two mouse models of human disease, one that develops a neurological disorder
similar to multiple sclerosis and another in which one gene regulating
the level of dopamine in the brain has been altered. Changes in brain dopamine
levels occur in Parkinson's disease, schizophrenia, and several other brain
disorders.
The Brain Morphology BIRN Project
will be based on ongoing studies of human subjects. Led by Bruce Rosen,
director of the Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Structural and Functional
Biomedical Imaging (Massachusetts General Hospital/Massachusetts Institute
of Technology/Harvard Medical School) and colleague Anders Dale, the project
will rely on collaborators led by Ferenc Jolesz and Ron Kikinis of Harvard's
Center for Neuroimaging Technologies (Brigham and Women's Hospital), Toga's
group at UCLA, and three groups at NCRR-supported General Clinical Research
Centers (GCRCs).
One of these is at Duke, led by Ranga
Krishnan; another is the GCRC at Massachusetts General Hospital, where
the BIRN projects will be led by David Nathan and Randy Gollub. The third
GCRC group, which includes clinical investigators in the departments of
psychiatry, neurosciences, and radiology at the UCSD School of Medicine,
is led by Holmes.
A major goal of this project is to
develop technologies for enabling seamless interoperability of algorithms
and computational tools for analysis and visualization of structural brain
imaging data and for sharing of data and computational resources across
the research network. The initial clinical focus of the project will be
on depression and Alzheimer's disease.
Advanced networking for BIRN will
be developed using the Internet 2/Abilene high-speed infrastructure. Eventually,
BIRN will use the large-scale distributed supercomputing resources of the
TeraGrid, being established by NSF under the Partnerships for Advanced
Computational Infrastructure (PACI) program.
TeraGrid, the most powerful computing
environment ever proposed for scientific research, will facilitate the
acquisition and correlation of the huge, complex datasets. "It’s a tremendous
computational challenge to perform comparisons on the vast amount of data
that will be collected by the BIRN sites," said Fran Berman, director of
SDSC, one of four TeraGrid sites. "BIRN will be an ideal test-bed for the
national cyberinfrastructure, bringing together the hardware and software
necessary for a scalable network of databases and computational resources."
Ellisman is also looking forward
to the participation of Cal-(IT), a new partnership of UCSD and the University
of California, Irvine, to extend the Internet throughout the physical world.
Cal-(IT) director Larry Smarr explained that "BIRN will be part of the
Cal-(IT) program on Digitally Enabled Genomic Medicine, and BIRN will work
with Cal-(IT) to develop a high-speed wireless capability to enable anywhere/anytime
access to BIRN data and images." Additional supporters of BIRN include
industry partners Oracle Corporation, Compaq Computer Corporation, and
Sun Microsystems, which are providing database, storage, server, and computer-cluster
technologies. - By Sue Pondrom
Related website:
BIRN : http://birn.ncrr.nih.gov/birn/birn_getpage.php?fname=about_birn_bg.html
[Contact: David L. Hart, Sue Pondrom]
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