77 research outputs found

    Twisted bilayer systems

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    Multi-physics simulations with Octopus

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    Helmholtz Portfolio Theme Large-Scale Data Management and Analysis (LSDMA)

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    The Helmholtz Association funded the "Large-Scale Data Management and Analysis" portfolio theme from 2012-2016. Four Helmholtz centres, six universities and another research institution in Germany joined to enable data-intensive science by optimising data life cycles in selected scientific communities. In our Data Life cycle Labs, data experts performed joint R&D together with scientific communities. The Data Services Integration Team focused on generic solutions applied by several communities

    Brain-Inspired Computing

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    This open access book constitutes revised selected papers from the 4th International Workshop on Brain-Inspired Computing, BrainComp 2019, held in Cetraro, Italy, in July 2019. The 11 papers presented in this volume were carefully reviewed and selected for inclusion in this book. They deal with research on brain atlasing, multi-scale models and simulation, HPC and data infra-structures for neuroscience as well as artificial and natural neural architectures

    Intelligence artificielle: Les défis actuels et l'action d'Inria - Livre blanc Inria

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    Livre blanc Inria N°01International audienceInria white papers look at major current challenges in informatics and mathematics and show actions conducted by our project-teams to address these challenges. This document is the first produced by the Strategic Technology Monitoring & Prospective Studies Unit. Thanks to a reactive observation system, this unit plays a lead role in supporting Inria to develop its strategic and scientific orientations. It also enables the institute to anticipate the impact of digital sciences on all social and economic domains. It has been coordinated by Bertrand Braunschweig with contributions from 45 researchers from Inria and from our partners. Special thanks to Peter Sturm for his precise and complete review.Les livres blancs d’Inria examinent les grands dĂ©fis actuels du numĂ©rique et prĂ©sentent les actions menĂ©es par nosĂ©quipes-projets pour rĂ©soudre ces dĂ©fis. Ce document est le premier produit par la cellule veille et prospective d’Inria. Cette unitĂ©, par l’attention qu’elle porte aux Ă©volutions scientifiques et technologiques, doit jouer un rĂŽle majeur dans la dĂ©termination des orientations stratĂ©giques et scientifiques d’Inria. Elle doit Ă©galement permettre Ă  l’Institut d’anticiper l’impact des sciences du numĂ©rique dans tous les domaines sociaux et Ă©conomiques. Ce livre blanc a Ă©tĂ© coordonnĂ© par Bertrand Braunschweig avec des contributions de 45 chercheurs d’Inria et de ses partenaires. Un grand merci Ă  Peter Sturm pour sa relecture prĂ©cise et complĂšte. Merci Ă©galement au service STIP du centre de Saclay – Île-de-France pour la correction finale de la version française

    The coming decade of digital brain research - A vision for neuroscience at the intersection of technology and computing

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    Brain research has in recent years indisputably entered a new epoch, driven by substantial methodological advances and digitally enabled data integration and modeling at multiple scales – from molecules to the whole system. Major advances are emerging at the intersection of neuroscience with technology and computing. This new science of the brain integrates high-quality basic research, systematic data integration across multiple scales, a new culture of large-scale collaboration and translation into applications. A systematic approach, as pioneered in Europe’s Human Brain Project (HBP), will be essential in meeting the pressing medical and technological challenges of the coming decade. The aims of this paper are: To develop a concept for the coming decade of digital brain research To discuss it with the research community at large, with the aim of identifying points of convergence and common goals. To provide a scientific framework for current and future development of EBRAINS. To inform and engage stakeholders, funding organizations and research institutions regarding future digital brain research. To identify and address key ethical and societal issues. While we do not claim that there is a ‘one size fits all’ approach to addressing these aspects, we are convinced that discussions around the theme of digital brain research will help drive progress in the broader field of neuroscience

    Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Sustainable Ultrascale Computing Systems (NESUS 2015) Krakow, Poland

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    Proceedings of: Second International Workshop on Sustainable Ultrascale Computing Systems (NESUS 2015). Krakow (Poland), September 10-11, 2015
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