Simulating the behavior of the Human Brain on GPUS

Pedro Valero-Lara, Ivan Martínez-Pérez, Raül Sirvent, Antonio J. Peña, Xavier Martorell, Jesús Labarta

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

The simulation of the behavior of the Human Brain is one of the most important challenges in computing today. The main problem consists of finding efficient ways to manipulate and compute the huge volume of data that this kind of simulations need, using the current technology. In this sense, this work is focused on one of the main steps of such simulation, which consists of computing the Voltage on neurons' morphology. This is carried out using the Hines Algorithm and, although this algorithm is the optimum method in terms of number of operations, it is in need of non-Trivial modifications to be efficiently parallelized on GPUS. We proposed several optimizations to accelerate this algorithm on GPU-based architectures, exploring the limitations of both, method and architecture, to be able to solve efficiently a high number of Hines systems (neurons). Each of the optimizations are deeply analyzed and described. Two different approaches are studied, one for mono-morphology simulations (batch of neurons with the same shape) and one for multi-morphology simulations (batch of neurons where every neuron has a different shape). In mono-morphology simulations we obtain a good performance using just a single kernel to compute all the neurons. However this turns out to be inefficient on multi-morphology simulations. Unlike the previous scenario, in multi-morphology simulations a much more complex implementation is necessary to obtain a good performance. In this case, we must execute more than one single GPU kernel. In every execution (kernel call) one specific part of the batch of the neurons is solved. These parts can be seen as multiple and independent tridiagonal systems. Although the present paper is focused on the simulation of the behavior of the Human Brain, some of these techniques, in particular those related to the solving of tridiagonal systems, can be also used for multiple oil and gas simulations. Our studies have proven that the optimizations proposed in the present work can achieve high performance on those computations with a high number of neurons, being our GPU implementations about 4× and 8× faster than the OpenMP multicore implementation (16 cores), using one and two NVIDIA K80 GPUS respectively. Also, it is important to highlight that these optimizations can continue scaling, even when dealing with a very high number of neurons.

Original languageEnglish
Article number73
JournalOil and Gas Science and Technology
Volume73
DOIs
StatePublished - 2018
Externally publishedYes

Funding

Acknowledgments. This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under Grant Agreement No. 720270 (HBP SGA1), from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness under the project Computación de Altas Prestaciones VII (TIN2015-65316-P), the Departament d’Innovació, Universitats i Empresa de la Generalitat de Catalunya, under project MPEX-PAR: Models de Programació i Entorns d’Execució Parallels (2014-SGR-1051). We thank the support of NVIDIA through the BSC/UPC NVIDIA GPU Center of Excellence, and the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant Agreement No. 749516.

FundersFunder number
Computación de Altas Prestaciones VIITIN2015-65316-P
European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program
NVIDIA GPU Center of Excellence
Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness
NVIDIA
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme720270, 749516
Generalitat de Catalunya2014-SGR-1051

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