Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Device to help neuroscientists analyse 'big data'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Jul, 2014 07:46 AM
    In the era of unprecedented quantities of information via web, mobile and other internet-based operations, here comes a new device that can help neuroscientists make sense of the "big data".
     
    Called Thunder - a library of tools developed at the Maryland-based nonprofit Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Janelia Research Campus - it speeds the analysis of data sets that are so large and complex they would take days or weeks to analyze on a single workstation, if a single workstation could do it at all.
     
    Researchers claim they have used Thunder to quickly find patterns in high-resolution images collected from the brains of active zebrafish and mice with multiple imaging techniques.
     
    "Using Thunder, we analysed images of the brain in minutes, interacting with and revising analyses without the lengthy delays associated with previous methods," said Janelia Research Campus group leaders Jeremy Freeman, Misha Ahrens and other colleagues.
     
    "Being able to apply analyses quickly - one after the other - is important. Speed gives us more flexibility to explore and get new ideas," Freeman added in a report appeared in the journal Nature Methods.
     
    That is why trying to analyae neuroscience data with slow computational tools can be so frustrating.
     
    "For some analyses, you can load the data, start it running, and then come back the next day. But if you need to tweak the analysis and run it again, then you have to wait another night," Ahrens noted.
     
    For larger data sets, the lag time might be weeks or months.
     
    Thunder can run on a private cluster or on Amazon's cloud computing services.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    New technology may improve light-based cancer treatment

    New technology may improve light-based cancer treatment
    Researchers have developed a new technology that could bring photodynamic therapy (PDT), which uses lasers to activate special drugs to treat easily accessible tumours such as oral and skin cancer, into areas of the body which were previously inaccessible.

    New technology may improve light-based cancer treatment

    Handle this! Teenagers don't trust information via tweets

    Handle this! Teenagers don't trust information via tweets
    Are you among those who love tweeting but somewhat wary of information via tweets from others? Join the 'Millennial Generation' that has a “healthy mistrust” of the information they read on Twitter.

    Handle this! Teenagers don't trust information via tweets

    Secure your tablet with safer lithium-ion battery

    Secure your tablet with safer lithium-ion battery
    The convenient and deficient lithium-ion battery (LIB) that power your tablets and smartphones may soon become a lot safer as scientists have designed a kind of lithium battery component that is far less likely to catch fire and still promises effective performance.

    Secure your tablet with safer lithium-ion battery

    3D printed skin reveals how sharks swim fast

    3D printed skin reveals how sharks swim fast
    It may be a while before humans can wear sharkskin swimsuits, but researchers have now devised a way to print a shark-like skin to see how the bumpy skins of the sharks help them swim so fast.

    3D printed skin reveals how sharks swim fast

    Mobile phone data can help combat malaria: Study

    Mobile phone data can help combat malaria: Study
    Data from mobile phones that provide crucial information about movements of people within a country could be key to designing an effective malaria elimination programme, a promising study showed.

    Mobile phone data can help combat malaria: Study

    Facebook tips on how to halt false rumours on social media

    Facebook tips on how to halt false rumours on social media
    Social networking websites can add fire to the fuel of a false rumour. Simply updating Facebook or Twitter pages may not be enough for organisations concerned with public safety to halt the spread of such rumours, a joint study by Facebook and Standford University in the US indicated.

    Facebook tips on how to halt false rumours on social media