2019 42nd International Convention on Information and Communication Technology, Electronics and Microelectronics (MIPRO) 2019
DOI: 10.23919/mipro.2019.8757075
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Exploiting GPUs on distributed infrastructures for medical imaging applications with VIP and DIRAC

Abstract: GPU usage has become mandatory for the processing of (3D) medical data, as well as for efficient machine learning approaches such as deep learning. In this contribution, we present how VIP and DIRAC can be leveraged to run medical image processing applications on distributed computing resources equipped with GPUs. VIP (Virtual Imaging Platform) is a web portal for the simulation and processing of massive data in medical imaging. VIP users can access applications as a service and significant amounts of computin… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…In [12], authors introduced a scalable intuitive deep learning toolkit called R2D2 for medical image segmentation by offering novel distributed versions of two well-known and widely used CNN segmentation architectures. [13] described a system that leverages Virtual Imaging Platform (VIP) and Distributed Infrastructure with Remote Agent Control (DIRAC) enabling researchers to use distributed computing resources with GPUs for their specific medical imaging applications. We use the open-source distributed training platform called Horovod [14] to conduct experiments in a distributed-GPU setup that allows for a larger effective batch size of images, and varying learning rates.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In [12], authors introduced a scalable intuitive deep learning toolkit called R2D2 for medical image segmentation by offering novel distributed versions of two well-known and widely used CNN segmentation architectures. [13] described a system that leverages Virtual Imaging Platform (VIP) and Distributed Infrastructure with Remote Agent Control (DIRAC) enabling researchers to use distributed computing resources with GPUs for their specific medical imaging applications. We use the open-source distributed training platform called Horovod [14] to conduct experiments in a distributed-GPU setup that allows for a larger effective batch size of images, and varying learning rates.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It builds a layer between users and resources, hiding diversities across computing, storage, catalog, and queuing resources. DIRAC has been adopted by several HEP and non-HEP experiment communities [18], with different goals, intents, resources and workflows: it is experiment agnostic, extensible, and flexible [19]. LHCb uses DIRAC for managing all its distributed computing activities.…”
Section: The Dirac Projectmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It builds a layer between users and resources, hiding diversities across computing, storage, catalog, and queuing resources. DIRAC has been adopted by several HEP and non-HEP experiments' communities [2], with different goals, intents, resources and workflows: it is experiment agnostic, extensible, and flexible [3]. A single DIRAC service can provide a complete solution for the distributed computing of one, or multiple collaborations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%