65 research outputs found
The MammoGrid Project Grids Architecture
The aim of the recently EU-funded MammoGrid project is, in the light of
emerging Grid technology, to develop a European-wide database of mammograms
that will be used to develop a set of important healthcare applications and
investigate the potential of this Grid to support effective co-working between
healthcare professionals throughout the EU. The MammoGrid consortium intends to
use a Grid model to enable distributed computing that spans national borders.
This Grid infrastructure will be used for deploying novel algorithms as
software directly developed or enhanced within the project. Using the MammoGrid
clinicians will be able to harness the use of massive amounts of medical image
data to perform epidemiological studies, advanced image processing,
radiographic education and ultimately, tele-diagnosis over communities of
medical "virtual organisations". This is achieved through the use of
Grid-compliant services [1] for managing (versions of) massively distributed
files of mammograms, for handling the distributed execution of mammograms
analysis software, for the development of Grid-aware algorithms and for the
sharing of resources between multiple collaborating medical centres. All this
is delivered via a novel software and hardware information infrastructure that,
in addition guarantees the integrity and security of the medical data. The
MammoGrid implementation is based on AliEn, a Grid framework developed by the
ALICE Collaboration. AliEn provides a virtual file catalogue that allows
transparent access to distributed data-sets and provides top to bottom
implementation of a lightweight Grid applicable to cases when handling of a
large number of files is required. This paper details the architecture that
will be implemented by the MammoGrid project.Comment: Talk PSN MOAT0005 from the 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear
Physics (CHEP03), La Jolla, Ca, USA, March 2003, 6 pages, 4 figure
Grid Databases for Shared Image Analysis in the MammoGrid Project
The MammoGrid project aims to prove that Grid infrastructures can be used for
collaborative clinical analysis of database-resident but geographically
distributed medical images. This requires: a) the provision of a
clinician-facing front-end workstation and b) the ability to service real-world
clinician queries across a distributed and federated database. The MammoGrid
project will prove the viability of the Grid by harnessing its power to enable
radiologists from geographically dispersed hospitals to share standardized
mammograms, to compare diagnoses (with and without computer aided detection of
tumours) and to perform sophisticated epidemiological studies across national
boundaries. This paper outlines the approach taken in MammoGrid to seamlessly
connect radiologist workstations across a Grid using an "information
infrastructure" and a DICOM-compliant object model residing in multiple
distributed data stores in Italy and the UKComment: 10 pages, 5 figure
A perspective on the Healthgrid initiative
This paper presents a perspective on the Healthgrid initiative which involves
European projects deploying pioneering applications of grid technology in the
health sector. In the last couple of years, several grid projects have been
funded on health related issues at national and European levels. A crucial
issue is to maximize their cross fertilization in the context of an environment
where data of medical interest can be stored and made easily available to the
different actors in healthcare, physicians, healthcare centres and
administrations, and of course the citizens. The Healthgrid initiative,
represented by the Healthgrid association (http://www.healthgrid.org), was
initiated to bring the necessary long term continuity, to reinforce and promote
awareness of the possibilities and advantages linked to the deployment of GRID
technologies in health. Technologies to address the specific requirements for
medical applications are under development. Results from the DataGrid and other
projects are given as examples of early applications.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. Accepted by the Second International Workshop on
Biomedical Computations on the Grid, at the 4th IEEE/ACM International
Symposium on Cluster Computing and the Grid (CCGrid 2004). Chicago USA, April
200
The AliEn system, status and perspectives
AliEn is a production environment that implements several components of the
Grid paradigm needed to simulate, reconstruct and analyse HEP data in a
distributed way. The system is built around Open Source components, uses the
Web Services model and standard network protocols to implement the computing
platform that is currently being used to produce and analyse Monte Carlo data
at over 30 sites on four continents. The aim of this paper is to present the
current AliEn architecture and outline its future developments in the light of
emerging standards.Comment: Talk from the 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics
(CHEP03), La Jolla, Ca, USA, March 2003, 10 pages, Word, 10 figures. PSN
MOAT00
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