| Literature DB >> 24401992 |
Randal Burns1, William Gray Roncal2, Dean Kleissas3, Kunal Lillaney4, Priya Manavalan5, Eric Perlman6, Daniel R Berger7, Davi D Bock8, Kwanghun Chung9, Logan Grosenick10, Narayanan Kasthuri, Nicholas C Weiler, Karl Deisseroth, Michael Kazhdan, Jeff Lichtman, R Clay Reid, Stephen J Smith, Alexander S Szalay, Joshua T Vogelstein, R Jacob Vogelstein.
Abstract
We describe a scalable database cluster for the spatial analysis and annotation of high-throughput brain imaging data, initially for 3-d electron microscopy image stacks, but for time-series and multi-channel data as well. The system was designed primarily for workloads that build connectomes- neural connectivity maps of the brain-using the parallel execution of computer vision algorithms on high-performance compute clusters. These services and open-science data sets are publicly available at openconnecto.me. The system design inherits much from NoSQL scale-out and data-intensive computing architectures. We distribute data to cluster nodes by partitioning a spatial index. We direct I/O to different systems-reads to parallel disk arrays and writes to solid-state storage-to avoid I/O interference and maximize throughput. All programming interfaces are RESTful Web services, which are simple and stateless, improving scalability and usability. We include a performance evaluation of the production system, highlighting the effec-tiveness of spatial data organization.Entities:
Keywords: Connectomics; Data-intensive computing
Year: 2013 PMID: 24401992 PMCID: PMC3881956 DOI: 10.1145/2484838.2484870
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Stat Database Manag