GPU Day 2017 - The Future of Many-Core Computing in Science

Europe/Budapest
Meeting room (Building 18)

Meeting room

Building 18

29-33, Konkoly-Thege Miklos u, 1121 - Budapest, Hungary
Description

GPU Day 2017 - THE FUTURE OF MANY-CORE COMPUTING IN SCIENCE

The 7th in the conference series organized by the Wigner Research Centre for Physics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences is dedicated to the field of many-core computing in scientific and industrial applications.

This years' event is sponsored by Lombiq Ltd.

For the earlier events see: 2016, 2015, 2014

 

The full Schedule is now available on gpuday.com

 

Registration fee is 150 000 HUF (cc. 480 EUR, including VAT)
Limited number of support available to waive the participation fee, inquire below.

TOPICS INCLUDE:

  • Current status and near-future of many-core hardware and software
  • Many-core computing in physics and other fields of science
  • Medical applications of parallel technologies
  • Machine Learning, neural networks, feature recognition
  • Image processing, computer vision and reconstruction
  • Industrial applications of many-core computing
  • Many-core computing in education
  • Mobile and embedded parallel computing in science
  • Emerging accelerator platforms
  • Development technologies (languages, compilers, tools)

 

CONFIRMED KEY TALKS:

Accelerating Eigen Tensor libraries using SYCL
Mehdi Goli, Codeplay Software Ltd.

Accelerating parallel computing by closely linkage of CPU and FPGA
Miroslaw Walukiewicz, Intel

FPGA based acceleration scientific workloads - Why? How?
Suleyman Demirsoy, Intel

The Collaboration Spotting Graph Visualization tool
Xavier Eric Ouvrard, CERN

Computations for Collaboration Spotting on Neural Science Datasets
Richárd Forster, CERN

Computational challenges of gravitational-wave searches
Michał Bejger, Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center, Warsaw

FPGAs as manycore scientific coprocessors in high-level programming environments – Hastlayer
Zoltán Lehóczky, Lombiq Ltd.

GPU assisted light field capture and processing
Attila Barsi, Holografika Ltd.

Contributed talks:

 

A highly parallelizable Quantum Monte Carlo approach to the nonequilibrium steady state of open quantum systems
Alexandra Nagy (Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne)

Highly Parallel GPU-based Particle-in-Cell/MCC Plasma Simulation
Zoltán Juhász (University of Pannonia)

GPU accelerated investigation of a dual-frequency driven nonlinear oscillator
Ferenc Hegedűs (Budapest University of Technology and Economics)

Brain network model dynamical simulations
Vince Varga (Budapest University of Technology and Economics)

In silico studies of the mutant protein causing cystic fibrosis
Tamás Hegedűs (Molecular Biophysics Research Group of HAS, Semmelweis University)

Searching for high energy electromagnetic transients with ADWO
Zsolt Bagoly (Eötvös Loránd University)

Light curve modelling of eclipsing binaries
Gábor Marschalkó (Baja Observatory of University of Szeged)

Cosmological zoom-in simulations with stereographic projection
Gábor Rácz (Eötvös Loránd University)

LambdaGen - A GPU code generator powered by recursion schemes
András Leitereg (Eötvös Loránd University)

Pitfalls of instinct driven asynchronous programming in C#
Szilveszter Harangozó (EPAM Systems – Hungary)

Report on running the biggest GPU cluster in Hungary
Zoltán Kiss (National Information Infrastructure Development Program)

HIJING++ a HIC Monte Carlo for the Future (Parallel) Generations
Gergely Gábor Barnaföldi (Wigner RCP)

 

 

 

 

DEADLINES:

  • Extended abstract submission: 19 May 2017
  • Decision on accepted presentations: 21 May 2017
  • Registration deadline: 11 June 2017

Please send your abstracts and questions to:

Dániel BERÉNYI
{berenyi} . {daniel} {at} {wigner} . {mta} . {hu}

ORGANIZERS:
Dániel BERÉNYI (Wigner RCP)
Máté Ferenc NAGY-EGRI (Wigner RCP)
Gábor Cseh (Wigner RCP)
Gergely Gábor BARNAFÖLDI (Wigner RCP)

Participants
  • Agnes Fülöp
  • Agnes Vasarhelyi
  • Alex Olar
  • Alexandra Nagy
  • András Attila Sulyok
  • András Csige
  • András Leitereg
  • Anna Siroki
  • Aron Cserkaszky
  • Attila Barsi
  • Attila Iván
  • Attila Markus
  • Balazs Banto
  • Balázs Bagó
  • Balázs Kondákor
  • Balázs Majoros
  • Benedek Farkas
  • Borkó Máté
  • Denes Molnar
  • Dániel Bódis
  • Dávid Komorowicz
  • Emil Novak
  • Ferenc Hegedűs
  • Gabor Cseh
  • Gabor Felföldi
  • Gabor Puhr
  • George Paszti
  • Gergely Gábor Barnaföldi
  • Gergely Máthé
  • Gergő Almásy
  • Gábor Demeter
  • Gábor Domonkos
  • Gábor Dániel Balogh
  • Gábor Lehel
  • Gábor Marschalkó
  • Gábor Nagy
  • Gábor Rácz
  • Gáspár Balogh
  • Géza Ódor
  • Istvan Reguly
  • István Borsos
  • István Horváth
  • István Magashegyi
  • István Nádaslaki
  • Ivan Herczeg
  • Janos Orban
  • Jozsef Marinka-Toth
  • János Nuspl
  • János Sztakovics
  • Kiss Zoltán
  • Kristóf Muhi
  • Lajos Berenyi
  • Laszlo Kovacs
  • Laszlo Somlai
  • Lenard Szantho
  • Marietta M. Homor
  • Martin Albrecht
  • Marton Vargyas
  • Matyas Vasuth
  • Mehdi Goli
  • Melinda Hidasz
  • Michał Bejger
  • Miroslaw Walukiewicz
  • Ottó Sulija
  • Patrik Reizinger
  • Paweł Ciecieląg
  • Péter Fehér
  • Péter Pósfay
  • Richard Forster
  • Richárd Fiáth
  • Rod Burns
  • Róbert Csengeri
  • Skorka Antal
  • suleyman demirsoy
  • Szabolcs Nyisztor
  • Szilveszter Harangozó
  • Szilárd Sajti
  • Tamas Hegedus
  • Tamas Maray
  • tamas puski
  • Tamás Haidekker Galambos
  • Tamás Hajdu
  • Tamás Orosz
  • Tamás Sándor Soós
  • Tuan Mate Nguyen
  • Viktor Jeges
  • Viktor Szaszkó-Bogár
  • Vince Varga
  • Xavier OUVRARD
  • Zoltan Donko
  • Zoltan Juhasz
  • Zoltán Bankó
  • Zoltán Hajnal
  • Zoltán Lehóczky
  • Zoltán Szabó
  • Zoltán Zimborás
  • Zsolt Bagoly
  • Ákos Biró
  • Ákos Kovács
  • Álmos Szabó
  • Árpád Goretity
  • Árpád Molnár
    • 08:45 08:50
      Opening 5m
      Speaker: Dr Gergely Gábor Barnaföldi (Wigner RCP RMI of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences)
    • 08:50 09:10
      Languages, APIs and Compilers In Service of Parallelism 20m
      Speaker: Mr Máté Ferenc Nagy-Egri (MTA Wigner FK)
      Slides
    • 09:10 09:50
      GPU assisted light field capture and processing 40m
      Speaker: Attila Barsi (Holografika Ltd.)
      Slides
    • 09:50 10:30
      FPGA based acceleration scientific workloads - Why? How? 40m
      Speaker: Suleyman Demirsoy (Intel UK)
      Slides
    • 10:30 10:50
      Coffee Break 20m
    • 10:50 11:50
      Accelerating Eigen Tensor libraries using SYCL 1h
      Speaker: Mehdi Goli (Codeplay Ltd.)
      Slides
    • 11:50 12:15
      Automatic parallelisation from high-level abstractions for mesh-based simulations 25m
      Speaker: Gábor Dániel Balogh (Pázmány Péter Catholic University)
      Slides
    • 12:15 12:40
      LambdaGen - A GPU code generator powered by recursion schemes 25m
      Speaker: András Leitereg (Eötvös University)
      Slides
    • 12:40 14:10
      Lunch 1h 30m
    • 14:10 14:35
      In silico studies of the mutant protein causing cystic fibrosis 25m
      Speaker: Tamás Hegedűs (Molecular Biophysics Research Group, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary, Department of Biophysics and Radiation Biology, Semmelweis University, Hungary)
      Slides
    • 14:35 15:00
      GPU accelerated investigation of a dual-frequency driven nonlinear oscillator 25m
      Speaker: Ferenc Hegedűs (Department of Hydrodynamic Systems, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Budapest)
      Slides
    • 15:00 15:25
      A highly parallelizable Quantum Monte Carlo approach to the nonequilibrium steady state of open quantum systems 25m
      Speaker: Alexandra Nagy (Institute of Physics, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland)
      Slides
    • 15:25 15:50
      HIJING++ a HIC Monte Carlo for the Future (Parallel) Generations 25m
      Speaker: Dr Gergely Gábor Barnaföldi (Wigner RCP RMI of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences)
      Slides
    • 15:50 16:10
      Coffee Break 20m
    • 16:10 16:35
      Particles from viscous hydrodynamics - with GPUs 25m
      Speaker: Dénes Molnár (Purdue University, West Lafayette, USA)
      Slides
    • 16:35 17:00
      Chiral Magnetic Effect with Wigner Functions 25m
      Speaker: Dániel Berényi (Wigner RCP)
      Slides
    • 17:00 17:25
      Highly Parallel GPU-based Particle-in-Cell/MCC Plasma Simulation 25m
      Speaker: Zoltán Juhász (Department of Electrical Engineering and Information Systems, University of Pannonia, Veszprém, Hungary)
      Slides
    • 09:00 09:25
      Report on running the biggest GPU cluster in Hungary 25m
      Speaker: Zoltán Kiss (KIFÜ / NIIF Program)
      Slides
    • 09:25 09:50
      Hybrid Small Size hpcResource 25m
      Speaker: László Kovács (Faculty of Informatics, University of Debrecen, Debrecen)
      Slides
    • 09:50 10:20
      The Collaboration Spotting Graph Visualization tool 30m
      Speaker: Xavier Eric Ouvrard (CERN)
      Slides
    • 10:20 10:40
      Computations on Collaboration Spotting Datasets 20m
      Speaker: Richárd Forster (CERN)
      Slides
    • 10:40 11:00
      Coffee Break 20m
    • 11:00 11:40
      FPGAs as manycore scientific coprocessors in high-level programming environments – Hastlayer 40m
      Speakers: Benedek Farkas (Lombiq Ltd.) , Zoltán Lehóczky (Lombiq Ltd.)
      Slides
    • 11:40 12:20
      Accelerating parallel computing by closely linkage of CPU and FPGA 40m
      Speaker: Miroslaw Walukiewicz (Intel UK)
      Slides
    • 12:20 12:45
      Pitfalls of instinct driven asynchronous programming in C# 25m
      Speaker: Szilveszter Harangozó (EPAM Systems Hungary)
      Slides
    • 12:45 14:15
      Lunch 1h 30m
    • 14:15 14:55
      Computational challenges of gravitational-wave searches 40m
      Speaker: Michał Bejger (Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center, Warsaw)
      Slides
    • 14:55 15:20
      Searching for high energy electromagnetic transients with ADWO 25m
      Speaker: Zsolt Bagoly (Department of Physics of Complex Systems, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest)
      Slides
    • 15:20 15:45
      Brain network model dynamical simulations 25m
      Speaker: Vince Varga (Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Budapest)
      Slides
    • 15:45 16:05
      Coffee Break 20m
    • 16:05 16:30
      Cosmological zoom-in simulations with stereographic projection 25m
      Speaker: Gábor Rácz (Department of Physics of Complex Systems, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest)
      Slides
    • 16:30 16:55
      Light curve modelling of eclipsing binaries 25m
      Speaker: Gábor Marschalkó (Baja Observatory of Szeged University)
      Slides
    • 16:55 17:30
      Processing the lightcurves of eclipsing binaries based on GPU 35m
      Speakers: János Sztakovics (Department of Astronomy, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest) , Tamás Hajdú (Department of Astronomy, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest)
      Slides