Literature DB >> 21657987

Orthogonal recursive bisection as data decomposition strategy for massively parallel cardiac simulations.

Matthias Reumann1, Blake G Fitch, Aleksandr Rayshubskiy, Michael C Pitman, John J Rice.   

Abstract

We present the orthogonal recursive bisection algorithm that hierarchically segments the anatomical model structure into subvolumes that are distributed to cores. The anatomy is derived from the Visible Human Project, with electrophysiology based on the FitzHugh-Nagumo (FHN) and ten Tusscher (TT04) models with monodomain diffusion. Benchmark simulations with up to 16,384 and 32,768 cores on IBM Blue Gene/P and L supercomputers for both FHN and TT04 results show good load balancing with almost perfect speedup factors that are close to linear with the number of cores. Hence, strong scaling is demonstrated. With 32,768 cores, a 1000 ms simulation of full heart beat requires about 6.5 min of wall clock time for a simulation of the FHN model. For the largest machine partitions, the simulations execute at a rate of 0.548 s (BG/P) and 0.394 s (BG/L) of wall clock time per 1 ms of simulation time. To our knowledge, these simulations show strong scaling to substantially higher numbers of cores than reported previously for organ-level simulation of the heart, thus significantly reducing run times. The ability to reduce runtimes could play a critical role in enabling wider use of cardiac models in research and clinical applications.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21657987     DOI: 10.1515/BMT.2011.100

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomed Tech (Berl)        ISSN: 0013-5585            Impact factor:   1.411


  1 in total

Review 1.  Review of Electrostatic Force Calculation Methods and Their Acceleration in Molecular Dynamics Packages Using Graphics Processors.

Authors:  Anu George; Sandip Mondal; Madhura Purnaprajna; Prashanth Athri
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2022-09-08
  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.