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Corporate Social Responsibility
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11.06.2007 - 08:00am ET
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IBM World Community Grid Squeezes Decades of Cancer Research Into Two Years
First for Canada: Cancer Research Teams Using IBM-Sponsored Computer Grid to Speed Treatment Studies
(CSRwire) TORONTO - November 6, 2007 - Canadian researchers expect to accelerate the
war on cancer by tapping into a global network of hundreds of thousands of
people who volunteer their idle computer time to tackle some of the world's
most complex problems.
The research team, led by Dr. Igor Jurisica at the Ontario Cancer
Institute (OCI), and scientists at Princess Margaret Hospital and
University Health Network, are the first from Canada to use IBM's (NYSE:
IBM) World
Community Grid, a network of PCs and laptops with the power equivalent
to one of the globe's top five fastest supercomputers.
The team will use World Community Grid to analyze the results of
experiments on proteins using data collected by scientists at the
Hauptman-Woodward Medical Research Institute in Buffalo, New York. This
analysis would take conventional computer systems 162 years to complete.
However, using World Community Grid, Dr. Jurisica anticipates the analysis
could be finished in one to two years, and will provide researchers with a
better way to study how proteins function, insight that could lead to the
development of more effective cancer-fighting drugs.
"We know that most cancers are caused by defective proteins in our bodies,
but we need to better understand the specific function of those proteins
and how they interact in the body," said Dr. Jurisica. "We also have to
find proteins that will enable us to diagnose cancer earlier, before
symptoms appear, to have the best chance of treating the disease -- or
potentially stopping it completely."
The research team now has more than 86 million images of 9,400 unique
proteins that could be linked to cancer, captured in the course of more
than 14.5 million experiments by colleagues at Hauptman-Woodward.
This comprises the most comprehensive database on the chemistry of a large
number of proteins, a resource that will help researchers around the world
unlock the mystery of how many cancers, such as breast, prostate or
childhood leukemia, grow.
Approximately 150,000 Canadians will be diagnosed with cancer and more
than 70,000 will die of the disease in 2007 alone.
World Community Grid, sponsored by the IBM Corporation, uses grid
technology to establish a permanent, flexible infrastructure that provides
researchers around the world with a readily available pool of free
computational power that can be used to solve problems plaguing humanity.
Individuals can donate their computers for this project by registering on
www.worldcommunitygrid.org,
and installing a free, secure, small software program on their computers.
The computer requests data from World Community Grid's server when it is
idle, for example a user is at lunch, and performs the cancer-related
protein computations. A screen saver will tell individuals when their
computers are being used.
World Community Grid is the largest public humanitarian grid with more
than 333,000 members and links to more than 780,000 computers. However,
it's estimated that there are one billion computers worldwide,
underscoring the potential for the grid and its computational power to
significantly expand. Eight projects have been run on World Community Grid
to date, including protein folding and FightAIDS@Home, which completed five
years of HIV/AIDS research in just six months. Additional projects are in
the pipeline.
For more information on IBM, visit www.ibm.com.
For more information on World Community Grid, visit www.worldcommunitygrid.org.
For more information on Hauptman-Woodward, visit www.hwi.buffalo.edu.
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