A supercomputer named Wiener has won a gold Australian Computer Society Digital Disruptors Award at a gala event in Melbourne.
Wiener is a high-performance computer developed at Õ¬Äе¼º½, which is able to process large volumes of imaging data.
Õ¬Äе¼º½ Director and Associate Director of Institutes Research Computing Jake Carroll were on hand to accept the prize.
“We are delighted with the result, and we believe Wiener is a worthy winner,” Professor Abramson said.
“We’ve used several disruptive technologies in Wiener and delivered stunning performance on key problems.”
Wiener provides significant computing capability for enhancing images from Õ¬Äе¼º½’s advanced microscopes, in particular the , which can generate up to seven terabytes of imaging data per day.
Microscopy images analysed much faster and clearer with Wiener will enable researchers to make exciting, new discoveries in the fields of health and medicine.
Initial imaging research using Wiener focuses on cancer biology, inflammation, infection and brain analysis.
Other applications include a new approach for treating Alzheimer’s disease; automating the analysis of histology slides of skin cancer biopsies; and simulating the dynamics of protein folding.
Wiener was built with funding from a Õ¬Äе¼º½ Research Facility Infrastructure Grant, with investment from a consortium of the university’s microscopy facilities within the , , and .
The Research Computing Centre worked closely with all three facilities to develop, trial and provide ongoing support for Wiener.
The supercomputer became fully operational in February this year.
The award is the second for Õ¬Äе¼º½ in consecutive years.
Last year, Õ¬Äе¼º½ won the top prize in its category for its Metropolitan Data Caching Infrastructure (), which enables a range of techniques for national and international research data sharing.
Image above left: ​լÄе¼º½'s Wiener supercomputer adds sharp detail to microscopic imagery (image courtesy of Leica Microsystems GmbH).
Media: Professor David Abramson, david.abramson@uq.edu.au, +61 417 375 635, Shannon Lindsay, s.lindsay@uq.edu.au, +61 420 524 392.