Publication
Fast bio-inspired computation using a GPU-based systemic computer
AbstractBiology is inherently parallel. Models of biological systems and bio-inspired algorithms also share this parallelism, although most are simulated on serial computers. Previous work created the systemic computer – a new model of computation designed to exploit many natural properties observed in biological systems, including parallelism. The approach has been proven through two existing implementations and many biological models and visualizations. However to date the systemic computer implementations have all been sequential simulations that do not exploit the true potential of the model. In this paper the first ever parallel implementation of systemic computation is introduced. The GPU Systemic Computation Architecture is the first implementation that enables parallel systemic computation by exploiting the multiple cores available in graphics processors. Comparisons with the serial implementation when running two programs at different scales show that as the number of systems increases, the parallel architecture is several hundred times faster than the existing implementations, making it feasible to investigate systemic models of more complex biological systems.
Download publicationAssociated Researchers
Related Resources
See what’s new.
2024
Sustainability through Optimal Design of Buildings for Natural Ventilation using Updated Comfort and Occupancy ModelsThe benefits of incorporating natural ventilation simulation into a…
1992
The Prevention of Mode Errors Through Sensory FeedbackThe use of different kinds of feedback in preventing mode errors was…
2019
Extending Explicitly Modelled Simulation Debugging Environments with Dynamic StructureThe widespread adoption of Modelling and Simulation (M&S) techniques…
2017
A Taxonomy of Event Time RepresentationsTerms such as “simulated time,” “simulation time,” “virtual time,”…
Get in touch
Something pique your interest? Get in touch if you’d like to learn more about Autodesk Research, our projects, people, and potential collaboration opportunities.
Contact us