hpc related - RISC2 Project https://www.risc2-project.eu Mon, 11 Sep 2023 15:02:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 RISC2’s partners gather in Brussels to reflect on three years of collaboration between EU and Latin America https://www.risc2-project.eu/2023/07/26/risc2s-partners-gather-in-brussels-to-reflect-on-three-years-of-collaboration-between-eu-and-latin-america/ Wed, 26 Jul 2023 12:03:56 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=2992 Over the past three years, the RISC2 project has established a network for the exchange of knowledge and experience that has enabled its European and Latin American partners to strengthen relations in HPC and take significant steps forward in this area. With the project quickly coming to an end, it was time to meet face-to-face […]

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Over the past three years, the RISC2 project has established a network for the exchange of knowledge and experience that has enabled its European and Latin American partners to strengthen relations in HPC and take significant steps forward in this area. With the project quickly coming to an end, it was time to meet face-to-face in Brussels to reflect on the progress and achievements, the goals set, the difficulties faced, and, above all, what can be expected for the future.

The session began with a welcome and introduction by Mateo Valero (BSC), one of the main drivers of this cooperation and a leading name in the field of HPC. This intervention was later complemented by Fabrizio Gagliardi (BSC). Afterward, Elsa Carvalho (INESC TEC) presented the work done in terms of communication by the RISC2 team, an important segment for all the news and achievements to reach all the partners and countries involved.

Carlos J. Barrios Hernandez then presented the work done within the HPC Observatory, a relevant source of information that European and Latin American research organizations can address with HPC and/or AI issues.

The session closed with an important and pertinent debate on how to strengthen cooperation in HPC between the European Union and Latin America, in which all participants contributed and gave their opinion, committing to efforts so that the work developed within the framework of RISC2 is continued.

What our partners had to say about the meeting?

Rafael Mayo Garcia, CIEMAT:

“The policy event organized by RISC2 in Brussels was of utmost importance for the development of HPC and digital capabilities for a shared infrastructure between EU and LAC. Even more, it has had crucial contributions to international entities such as CYTED, the Ibero-American Programme for the Development of Science and Technology. On the CIEMAT side, it has been a new step beyond for building and participating in a HPC shared ecosystem.”

Esteban Meneses, CeNAT:

“In Costa Rica, CeNAT plays a critical role in fostering technological change. To achieve that goal, it is fundamental to synchronize our efforts with other key players, particularly government institutions. The event policy in Brussels was a great opportunity to get closer to our science and technology ministry and start a dialogue on the importance of HPC, data science, and artificial intelligence for bringing about the societal changes we aim for.”

Esteban Mocskos, UBA:

“The Policy Event recently held in Brussels and organized by the RISC2 project had several remarkable points. The gathering of experts in HPC research and management in Latin America and Europe served to plan the next steps in the joint endeavor to deepen the collaboration in this field. The advance in management policies, application optimization, and user engagement are fundamental topics treated during the main sessions and also during the point-to-point talks in every corner of the meeting room.
I can say that this meeting will also spawn different paths in these collaboration efforts that we’ll surely see their results during the following years with a positive impact on both sides of this fruitful relationship: Latin America and Europe.”

Sergio Nesmachnow, Universidad de la República:

“The National Supercomputing Center (Uruguay) and Universidad de la República have led the development of HPC strategies and technologies and their application to relevant problems in Uruguay. Specific meetings such as the policy event organized by RISC2 in Brussels are key to present and disseminate the current developments and achievements to relevant political and technological leaders in our country, so that they gain knowledge about the usefulness of HPC technologies and infrastructure to foster the development of national scientific research in capital areas such as sustainability, energy, and social development. It was very important to present the network of collaborators in Latin America and Europe and to show the involvement of institutional and government agencies.

Within the contacts and talks during the organization of the meeting, we introduced the projecto to national authorities, including the National Director of Science and Technology, Ministry of Education and Culture, and the President of the National Agency for Research and Innovation, as well as the Uruguayan Agency for International Cooperation and academic authorities from all institutions involved in the National Supercomputing Center initiative. We hope the established contacts can result in productive joint efforts to foster the development of HPC and related scientific areas in our country and the region.”

Carla Osthoff, LNCC:

“In Brazil, LNCC is critical in providing High Performance Computing Resources for the Research Community and training Human Resources and fostering new technologies. The policy event organized by RISC2 in Brussels was fundamental to synchronizing LNCC efforts with other government institutions and international  entities. On the LNCC side, it has been a new step beyond building and participating in an HPC-shared ecosystem.

Specific meetings such as the policy event organized by RISC2 in Brussels  were very important to present the network of collaborators in Latin America and Europe and to show the involvement of institutional and government agencies.

As a result of joint activities in research and development in the areas of information and communication technologies (ICT), artificial intelligence, applied mathematics, and computational modelling, with emphasis on the areas of scientific computing and data science, a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) have been signed between LNCC and Inria/France. As a  result of new joint activities, LNCC and INESC TEC/Portugal are starting  collaboration through INESC TEC International Visiting Researcher Programme 2023.”

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SC-Camp 2023 gathers students from HPC related fields in Cartagena de Indias https://www.risc2-project.eu/2023/06/13/sc-camp-2023-gathers-students-from-hpc-related-fields-in-cartagena-de-indias/ Tue, 13 Jun 2023 07:23:45 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=2833 Last month, students from the field of Computer Sciences, Engineering and others related to HPC (Physics & Material Sciences, Biology/Bioinformatics, Finance, etc), gathered for six days in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia, for the SC-Camp, where they had the chance to learn more about Super Computing and Distributed Systems. The week was filled with courses with […]

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Last month, students from the field of Computer Sciences, Engineering and others related to HPC (Physics & Material Sciences, Biology/Bioinformatics, Finance, etc), gathered for six days in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia, for the SC-Camp, where they had the chance to learn more about Super Computing and Distributed Systems. The week was filled with courses with focus on practical sessions, keynotes and a collaborative project.

As such, the aim of the SC-Camp was to give undergraduate and master students state-of-the-art lectures and programming practical sessions about High Performance and Distributed Computing topics.

SC-Camp is an itinerant school, which means that every year t will take HPC knowledge to a different place. This was the first time, since the Covid-19 pandemic, the SC-Camp took place in person.

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Subsequent Progress And Challenges Concerning The México-UE Project ENERXICO: Supercomputing And Energy For México https://www.risc2-project.eu/2023/05/24/subsequent-progress-and-challenges-concerning-the-mexico-ue-project-enerxico-supercomputing-and-energy-for-mexico/ Wed, 24 May 2023 09:38:01 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=2824 In this short notice, we briefly describe some afterward advances and challenges with respect to two work packages developed in the ENERXICO Project. This opened the possibility of collaborating with colleagues from institutions that did not participate in the project, for example from the University of Santander in Colombia and from the University of Vigo […]

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In this short notice, we briefly describe some afterward advances and challenges with respect to two work packages developed in the ENERXICO Project. This opened the possibility of collaborating with colleagues from institutions that did not participate in the project, for example from the University of Santander in Colombia and from the University of Vigo in Spain. This exemplifies the importance of the RISC2 project in the sense that strengthening collaboration and finding joint research areas and HPC applied ventures is of great benefit for both: our Latin American Countries and the EU. We are now initiating talks to target several Energy related topics with some of the RISC2 partners. 

The ENERXICO Project focused on developing advanced simulation software solutions for oil & gas, wind energy and transportation powertrain industries.  The institutions that collaborated in the project are for México: ININ (Institution responsible for México), Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados del IPN (Cinvestav), Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM IINGEN, FCUNAM), Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Azcapotzalco, Instituto Mexicano del Petróleo, Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN) and Pemex, and for the European Union: Centro de Supercómputo de Barcelona (Institution responsible for the EU), Technische Universitäts München, Alemania (TUM), Universidad de Grenoble Alpes, Francia (UGA), CIEMAT, España, Repsol, Iberdrola, Bull, Francia e Universidad Politécnica de Valencia, España.  

The Project contemplated four working packages (WP): 

WP1 Exascale Enabling: This was a cross-cutting work package that focused on assessing performance bottlenecks and improving the efficiency of the HPC codes proposed in vertical WP (UE Coordinator: BULL, MEX Coordinator: CINVESTAV-COMPUTACIÓN); 

WP2 Renewable energies:  This WP deployed new applications required to design, optimize and forecast the production of wind farms (UE Coordinator: IBR, MEX Coordinator: ININ); 

WP3 Oil and gas energies: This WP addressed the impact of HPC on the entire oil industry chain (UE Coordinator: REPSOL, MEX Coordinator: ININ); 

WP4 Biofuels for transport: This WP displayed advanced numerical simulations of biofuels under conditions similar to those of an engine (UE Coordinator: UPV-CMT, MEX Coordinator: UNAM); 

For WP1 the following codes were optimized for exascale computers: Alya, Bsit, DualSPHysics, ExaHyPE, Seossol, SEM46 and WRF.   

As an example, we present some of the results for the DualPHYysics code. We evaluated two architectures: The first set of hardware used were identical nodes, each equipped with 2 ”Intel Xeon Gold 6248 Processors”, clocking at 2.5 GHz with about 192 GB of system memory. Each node contained 4 Nvidia V100 Tesla GPUs with 32 GB of main memory each. The second set of hardware used were identical nodes, each equipped with 2 ”AMD Milan 7763 Processors”, clocking at 2.45 GHz with about 512 GB of system memory. Each node contained 4 Nvidia V100 Ampere GPUs with 40 GB of main memory each. The code was compiled and linked with CUDA 10.2 and OpenMPI 4. The application was executed using one GPU per MPI rank. 

In Figures 1 and 2 we show the scalability of the code for the strong and weak scaling tests that indicate that the scaling is very good. Motivated by these excellent results, we are in the process of performing in the LUMI supercomputer new SPH simulations with up to 26,834 million particles that will be run with up to 500 GPUs, which is 53.7 million particles per GPU. These simulations will be done initially for a Wave Energy Converter (WEC) Farm (see Figure 3), and later for turbulent models. 

Figure 1. Strong scaling test with a fix number of particles but increasing number of GPUs.

 

Figure 2. Weak scaling test with increasing number of particles and GPUs.

 

Figure 3. Wave Energy Converter (WEC) Farm (taken from https://corpowerocean.com/)

 

As part of WP3, ENERXICO developed a first version of a computer code called Black Hole (or BH code) for the numerical simulation of oil reservoirs, based on the numerical technique known as Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics or SPH. This new code is an extension of the DualSPHysics code (https://dual.sphysics.org/) and is the first SPH based code that has been developed for the numerical simulation of oil reservoirs and has important benefits versus commercial codes based on other numerical techniques.  

The BH code is a large-scale massively parallel reservoir simulator capable of performing simulations with billions of “particles” or fluid elements that represent the system under study. It contains improved multi-physics modules that automatically combine the effects of interrelated physical and chemical phenomena to accurately simulate in-situ recovery processes. This has led to the development of a graphical user interface, considered as a multiple-platform application for code execution and visualization, and for carrying out simulations with data provided by industrial partners and performing comparisons with available commercial packages.  

Furthermore, a considerable effort is presently being made to simplify the process of setting up the input for reservoir simulations from exploration data by means of a workflow fully integrated in our industrial partners’ software environment.  A crucial part of the numerical simulations is the equation of state.  We have developed an equation of state based on crude oil data (the so-called PVT) in two forms, the first as a subroutine that is integrated into the code, and the second as an interpolation subroutine of properties’ tables that are generated from the equation of state subroutine.  

An oil reservoir is composed of a porous medium with a multiphase fluid made of oil, gas, rock and other solids. The aim of the code is to simulate fluid flow in a porous medium, as well as the behaviour of the system at different pressures and temperatures.  The tool should allow the reduction of uncertainties in the predictions that are carried out. For example, it may answer questions about the benefits of injecting a solvent, which could be CO2, nitrogen, combustion gases, methane, etc. into a reservoir, and the times of eruption of the gases in the production wells. With these estimates, it can take the necessary measures to mitigate their presence, calculate the expense, the pressure to be injected, the injection volumes and most importantly, where and for how long. The same happens with more complex processes such as those where fluids, air or steam are injected, which interact with the rock, oil, water and gas present in the reservoir. The simulator should be capable of monitoring and preparing measurement plans. 

In order to be able to perform a simulation of a reservoir oil field, an initial model needs to be created.  Using geophysical forward and inverse numerical techniques, the ENERXICO project evaluated novel, high-performance simulation packages for challenging seismic exploration cases that are characterized by extreme geometric complexity. Now, we are undergoing an exploration of high-order methods based upon fully unstructured tetrahedral meshes and also tree-structured Cartesian meshes with adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) for better spatial resolution. Using this methodology, our packages (and some commercial packages) together with seismic and geophysical data of naturally fractured reservoir oil fields, are able to create the geometry (see Figure 4), and exhibit basic properties of the oil reservoir field we want to study.  A number of numerical simulations are performed and from these oil fields exploitation scenarios are generated.

 

Figure 4. A detail of the initial model for a SPH simulation of a porous medium.

 

More information about the ENERXICO Project can be found in: https://enerxico-project.eu/

By: Jaime Klapp (ININ, México) and Isidoro Gitler (Cinvestav, México)

 

 

 

 

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EU-CELAC summit https://www.risc2-project.eu/events/eu-celac-summit-from-17-18-july-2023-in-brussels/ Wed, 03 May 2023 15:56:42 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?post_type=mec-events&p=2808 EU-CELAS Summit

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EU-CELAS Summit

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EU, Latin America and Caribbean partners launch in Colombia the EU-LAC Digital Alliance https://www.risc2-project.eu/2023/03/17/eu-latin-america-and-caribbean-partners-launch-in-colombia-the-eu-lac-digital-alliance/ Fri, 17 Mar 2023 10:22:24 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=2785 On 14 March Bogotá, Colombia, the European Union-Latin America and Caribbean Digital Alliance was launched, a joint initiative to champion a human-centric approach to digital transformation. It is supported by an initial contribution of €145 million from Team Europe, including €50 million from the EU budget to boost digital cooperation between both regions. The Alliance’s […]

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On 14 March Bogotá, Colombia, the European Union-Latin America and Caribbean Digital Alliance was launched, a joint initiative to champion a human-centric approach to digital transformation. It is supported by an initial contribution of €145 million from Team Europe, including €50 million from the EU budget to boost digital cooperation between both regions.

The Alliance’s aim is to foster the development of secure, resilient and human-centric digital infrastructures on the basis of a values-based framework, ensuring a democratic and transparent enabling environment and putting a strong emphasis on privacy and digital rights. It is the first intercontinental digital partnership agreed between both regions under Global Gateway investment strategy, the EU’s offer for trusted and sustainable connections with partner countries.

More information here.

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LNCC’s HPC Summer School provided sessions related to HPC to their community https://www.risc2-project.eu/2023/01/30/lnccs-hpc-summer-school-provided-sessions-related-to-hpc-to-their-community/ Mon, 30 Jan 2023 11:31:48 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=2688 LNCC, one of the RISC2 Brazilian partners, organized the HPC Summer School “Escola Supercomputador Santos Dumont,” which took place between January 16 to 24, 2023, as part of the LNCC’s Summer Program. The School aimed to provide mini-courses and talks related to programming on high-performance computers, such as parallel programming models, profiling tools, and libraries […]

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LNCC, one of the RISC2 Brazilian partners, organized the HPC Summer School “Escola Supercomputador Santos Dumont,” which took place between January 16 to 24, 2023, as part of the LNCC’s Summer Program.

The School aimed to provide mini-courses and talks related to programming on high-performance computers, such as parallel programming models, profiling tools, and libraries for developing optimized parallel algorithms for the SDumont user community and the high-performance computing programming community.

Due to the extensive territory of Brazil and the number of research projects, it is mandatory to provide regular HPC schools for the research community. According to Carla Osthoff, one of the organizers of this school, “SDumont is the only Brazilian supercomputer dedicated to the research community that is part of the TOP 500 list. The Brazilian Ministry of Science and Technology offers free access to all Brazilian research projects in the country and foreign collaborators. Currently, we have 238 research projects from 18 research areas.  This edition of the School received 350 registrations, but we also provided online YouTube access to the community.”

The event happened remotely, and all the sessions are available on Youtube.

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Call for Proposals to Support High Performance Computing Centers FAPESP-MCTI-MCom-CGI.br https://www.risc2-project.eu/2023/01/12/call-for-proposals-to-support-high-performance-computing-centers-fapesp-mcti-mcom-cgi-br/ Thu, 12 Jan 2023 12:41:06 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=2648 The call is now open until March 31, 2023. The Call for High Performance Computing (HPC) Centers aims to support the acquisition of high performance computing equipment that can provide computational infrastructure to conduct research in all areas of knowledge that are intensive in computing resources. The resources necessary for the development of the infrastructure […]

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The call is now open until March 31, 2023.

The Call for High Performance Computing (HPC) Centers aims to support the acquisition of high performance computing equipment that can provide computational infrastructure to conduct research in all areas of knowledge that are intensive in computing resources. The resources necessary for the development of the infrastructure of the facilities to receive the high performance computing equipment are considered to be the responsibility of the proponent institutions and constitute the required counterpart for the presentation of the proposal. In addition, proposers must demonstrate a proven track record as an HPC center.

This program has the nature of creating infrastructure and is not intended to provide conventional funding for research projects that will eventually take advantage of the infrastructure supported here, and the support for the realization of such research projects should be sought in the lines of funding for research.

A portion of the maintenance costs of the equipment to be purchased may be requested in this Call. However, it is expected that proposals submitted to this Call will also propose other ways to cover equipment maintenance costs. No funds may be requested to cover costs for the maintenance of the building infrastructure and support for computer equipment, such as air conditioning and the like, which should be covered by funds contributed by the proponent institutions or from other sources. Furthermore, the costs of salaries and other charges related to the support staff that this Call for Proposals foresees should be available for the operation of the center cannot be requested in the proposals submitted to this Call for Proposals and are the sole responsibility of the proposing institutions. The proponents may foresee, in their business plan, charging for the provision of the services, provided that some level of gratuity is offered to users from academic institutions.

WHO?

This Call is open to Education or Research Institutions from all over Brazil, consortium or not, to support 1 center in the state of São Paulo and 1 or 2 centers in other Brazilian states, in a total amount of up to R$ 100 million. The center based in São Paulo may receive, in this Call, resources of up to R$ 50 million, and must meet the demand for high performance computing services within the entire state of São Paulo. The centers located in other states may receive resources of up to R$ 25 million, in the case of non-consortium projects, or up to R$ 50 million in the case of a consortium of several institutions that meet the demand for high performance computing services nationwide.

This Call is launched in the scope of FAPESP’s Multiuser Equipment Program – EMU and has an infra-structural nature.

Know more about this call here. 

 

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HPC Summer School “Escola Supercomputador Santos Dumont 2023” https://www.risc2-project.eu/events/hpc-summer-school-escola-supercomputador-santos-dumont-2023/ Mon, 19 Dec 2022 10:38:22 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?post_type=mec-events&p=2622 LNCC is organizing the HPC summer school “Escola Supercomputador Santos Dumont 2023”. The School will take place from January 16th-24th, in remote format, and is open to the HPC research community. The school aims to provide the SDumont user community and the high performance computing programming community in general with mini-courses related to programming on […]

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LNCC is organizing the HPC summer school “Escola Supercomputador Santos Dumont 2023”. The School will take place from January 16th-24th, in remote format, and is open to the HPC research community.

The school aims to provide the SDumont user community and the high performance computing programming community in general with mini-courses related to programming on high performance computers such as parallel programming models, profiling tools and libraries for the development of optimized parallel algorithms.

Know more. 

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Advanced Computing Collaboration to Growth Sustainable Ecosystems https://www.risc2-project.eu/2022/12/12/advanced-computing-collaboration-to-growth-sustainable-ecosystems/ Mon, 12 Dec 2022 10:45:48 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=2612 The impact of High-Performance Computing (HPC) in different contexts related to the needs of high capabilities and strategies to simulate or to compute is very known. In the development of the RISC2 project, observing the project’s main goals, it is not a potential impact to support scientific challenges recognised after the exploration but an essential […]

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The impact of High-Performance Computing (HPC) in different contexts related to the needs of high capabilities and strategies to simulate or to compute is very known. In the development of the RISC2 project, observing the project’s main goals, it is not a potential impact to support scientific challenges recognised after the exploration but an essential requirement for scientific, productive, and social activities. Different outcomes are presented in the academic spaces as the workshops and main tracks of the Latin American Conference on High-Performance Computing (CARLA 2023). In these spaces, different RISC2 proposals show how HPC allows competitiveness, demands collaboration to attack global interests, and guarantees sustainability.

In the European and Latin American (EuroLatAm) HPC ecosystems, it tis possible to identify actors in different domains: industry, academy, research, society, and government. Each of them, at different levels, has a group of demands or interactions, depending on the interests. I.e., the industry demands capabilities to have HPC solutions for productivity and wants skills from the academy to perform development actors to build applications to use solutions. Another example could be the relationship between research and the government. In the HPC Ecosystem, collaborations allow synergies to face common interests. Still, it demands policies and coordinated roadmaps to support long-term projects and activities with a clear impact on society.

Of course, a historical relationship exists between Latin America and Europe from colonial history. In the case of advanced computing projects, it is possible to identify, from the first EuroLatAm Grid Computing projects more than twenty years ago until the real supercomputing projects such as RISC and RISC2. Still, now, more with shared interests and the different EuroLatAm HPC projects improve competitiveness and collaboration. Competitiveness for industrial and productive business, partnership (and competitiveness) in science and education goals, and human wellness. So paraphrasing Mateo Valero “who does not compute does not compete”, I would add “who does not collaborate does not survive”.

Taking collaboration and competitiveness, the RISC2 project allows identifying sustainability elements and sustainable workflows for different projects. The impressive interaction between the actors of the HPC EuroLatAm ecosystem has not only given scientific results but also policies, recommendations, best practices, and new questions. For these outcomes, in the past 2022 Supercomputing Conference, RISC2 was awarded the 2022 HPCWire Editors’ Choice Award as the Best HPC Collaboration.

Sustainable advanced computing ecosystems and their growth are evident with the knowledge of the results of projects such as RISC2. Collaboration, interaction, and competitiveness build human development and guarantee development, technological diversification, and peer-to-peer relationships to attack common interests and problems. So, RISC2 is a crucial step to advance to a RISC3 as it was at the time of the previous RISC.

 

By Universidad Industrial de Santander

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Leveraging HPC technologies to unravel epidemic dynamics https://www.risc2-project.eu/2022/10/17/leveraging-hpc-technologies-to-unravel-epidemic-dynamics/ Mon, 17 Oct 2022 08:10:17 +0000 https://www.risc2-project.eu/?p=2419 When we talk about the 14th century, we probably are making reference to one of the most adverse periods of human history. It was an era of regular armed conflicts, declining social systems, famine, and disease. It was the time of the bubonic plague pandemics, the Black Death, that wiped out millions of people in […]

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When we talk about the 14th century, we probably are making reference to one of the most adverse periods of human history. It was an era of regular armed conflicts, declining social systems, famine, and disease. It was the time of the bubonic plague pandemics, the Black Death, that wiped out millions of people in Europe, Africa, and Asia [1].

Several factors contributed to the catastrophic outcomes of the Black Death. The crises was boosted by the lack of two important components: knowledge and technology. There was no clue about the spread dynamics of the disease, and containment policies were desperately based on assumptions or beliefs. Some opted for self-isolation to get away from the bad airthat was believed to be the cause of the illness [2]. Others thought the plague was a divine punishment and persecuted the heretics in order to appease the heavens[3]. Though the first of these two strategies was actually very effective, the second one only increased the tragedy of that scenario. 

The bubonic plague of the 14th century is a great example of how unfortunate ignorance can be in the context of epidemics. If the transmission mechanisms are not well-understood, we are not able to design productive measures against them. We may end up such as our medieval predecessors making things much more worse. Fortunately, the advances in science and technology have provided humanity with powerful tools to comprehend infectious diseases and rapidly develop response plans. In this particular matter, epidemic models and simulations have become crucial. 

In the recent COVID-19 events, many public health authorities relied on the outcomes of models, so as to determine the most probable paths of the epidemic and make informed decisions regarding sanitary measures [4]. Epidemic models have been around for a long time, and have become more and more sophisticated. One reason is the fact that they feed on data that has to be collected and processed, and which has increased in quantity and variety.  

Data contains interesting patterns that give hints about the influence of apparently non-epidemiological factors such as mobility and interaction type [5]. This is how, in the 19th century, John Snow managed to discover the cause of a cholera epidemic in Soho. He plotted the registered cholera cases in a map and saw they clustered around a water pump that he presumed was contaminated [6]. Thanks to Dr. Snow’s findings, water quality started to be considered as an important component of public health. 

As models grow in intricacy, the demand for more powerful computing systems also increases. In advanced approaches such as agent-based [7] and network (graph) models [8], every person is represented inside a complex framework in which the infection spreads according to specific rules. These rules could be related to the nature of the relations between individuals, their number of contacts, the places they visit, disease characteristics, and even stochastic influences. Frameworks are commonly composed of millions of individuals too, because we often want to analyze countrywide effects. 

In brief, to unravel epidemic dynamics we need to process and produce a lot of accurate information, and we need to do it fast. High-performance computing (HPC) systems provide high-spec hardware and support advanced techniques such as parallel computing, which accelerate calculation by using several resources at a time to perform one or different tasks concurrently. This is an advantage for stochastic epidemic models that require hundreds of independent executions to deliver reliable outputs. Frameworks with millions of nodes or agents need several GB of memory to be processed, which is a requirement that can be met only by HPC systems. 

Based on the work of Cruz et al. [9], we developed a model that represents the spread dynamics of COVID-19 in Costa Rica [10]. This model consists of a contact network of five million nodes, in which every Costa Rican citizen has a family, school, work, or random connection with their neighbors. These relations impact the probability of getting infected, as well as the infection statusof the neighbors. The infection status varies with time, as people evolve from not having symptoms to have mild, severe, or critical conditions. People may be asymptomatic as well. The model also addresses variations in location, school and workplace sizes, age, mobility, and vaccination rates. In addition, some of these inputs are stochastic. 

Such model takes only a few hours to be simulated in an HPC cluster, when normal systems would require much more time. We managed to evaluate scenarios in which different sanitary measures were changed or eliminated. This analysis brought interesting results, such as that going to a meeting with our family or friends could be as harmful as attending a concert with dozens of strangers, in terms of the additional infections that these activities would generate. Such findings are valuable inputs for health authorities, because they demonstrate that preventing certain behaviors in the population can delay the peak of infections and give them more time to save lives. 

Even though HPC has been fundamental in computational epidemiology to give key insights into epidemic dynamics, we still have to leverage this technology in some contexts. For example, we must first strengthen health and information systems in developing countries to get the maximum advantage of HPC and epidemic models. The above can be achieved through interinstitutional and international collaboration, but also through national policies that support research and development. If we encourage the study of infectious diseases, we benefit from this knowledge in a way that we can approach other pandemics better in the future. 

 

References

[1] Encyclopedia Britannica. n.d. Crisis, recovery, and resilience: Did the Middle Ages end?. [online] Available at: <https://www.britannica.com/topic/history-of-Europe/Crisis-recovery-and-resilience-Did-the-Middle-Ages-end> [Accessed 13 September 2022]. 

[2] Mellinger, J., 2006. Fourteenth-Century England, Medical Ethics, and the Plague. AMA Journal of Ethics, 8(4), pp.256-260. 

[3] Carr, H., 2020. Black Death Quarantine: How Did We Try To Contain The Deadly Disease?. [online] Historyextra.com. Available at: <https://www.historyextra.com/period/medieval/plague-black-death-quarantine-history-how-stop-spread/> [Accessed 13 September 2022]. 

[4] McBryde, E., Meehan, M., Adegboye, O., Adekunle, A., Caldwell, J., Pak, A., Rojas, D., Williams, B. and Trauer, J., 2020. Role of modelling in COVID-19 policy development. Paediatric Respiratory Reviews, 35, pp.57-60. 

[5] Pasha, D., Lundeen, A., Yeasmin, D. and Pasha, M., 2021. An analysis to identify the important variables for the spread of COVID-19 using numerical techniques and data science. Case Studies in Chemical and Environmental Engineering, 3, p.100067. 

[6] Bbc.co.uk. 2014. Historic Figures: John Snow (1813 – 1858). [online] Available at: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/snow_john.shtml> [Accessed 13 September 2022]. 

[7] Publichealth.columbia.edu. 2022. Agent-Based Modeling. [online] Available at: <https://www.publichealth.columbia.edu/research/population-health-methods/agent-based-modeling> [Accessed 13 September 2022]. 

[8] Keeling, M. and Eames, K., 2005. Networks and epidemic models. Journal of The Royal Society Interface, 2(4), pp.295-307. 

[9] Cruz, E., Maciel, J., Clozato, C., Serpa, M., Navaux, P., Meneses, E., Abdalah, M. and Diener, M., 2021. Simulation-based evaluation of school reopening strategies during COVID-19: A case study of São Paulo, Brazil. Epidemiology and Infection, 149. 

[10] Abdalah, M., Soto, C., Arce, M., Cruz, E., Maciel, J., Clozato, C. and Meneses, E., 2022. Understanding COVID-19 Epidemic in Costa Rica Through Network-Based Modeling. Communications in Computer and Information Science, pp.61-75. 

 

By CeNAT

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