PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New open-source platform cuts costs for running AI

2023-12-07
(Press-News.org) ITHACA, N.Y. – Cornell University researchers have released a new, open-source platform called Cascade that can run artificial intelligence models in a way that slashes expenses and energy costs while dramatically improving performance.

Cascade is designed for settings like smart traffic intersections, medical diagnostics, equipment servicing using augmented reality, digital agriculture, smart power grids and automatic product inspection during manufacturing – situations where AI models must react within a fraction of a second.

With the rise of AI, many companies are eager to leverage new capabilities but worried about the associated computing costs and the risks of sharing private data with AI companies or sending sensitive information into the cloud. Also, today's AI models are slow, limiting their use in settings where data must be transferred back and forth or the model is controlling an automated system. A team led by Ken Birman, professor of computer science, combined several innovations to address these concerns.

Birman partnered with Weijia Song, a senior research associate, to develop an edge computing system they named Cascade. Edge computing is an approach that places the computation and data storage closer to the sources of data, protecting sensitive information. Song’s “zero copy” edge computing design minimizes data movement. The AI models don’t have to wait to fetch data when reacting to an event, which enables faster responses, the researchers said.

“Cascade enables users to put machine learning and data fusion really close to the edge of the internet, so artificially intelligent actions can occur instantly,” Birman said. “This contrasts with standard cloud computing approaches, where the frequent movement of data from machine to machine forces those same AIs to wait, resulting in long delays perceptible to the user.” 

Cascade is giving impressive results, with most programs running two to 10 times faster than cloud-based applications, and some computer vision tasks speeding up by factors of 20 or more. Larger AI models see the most benefit.

Moreover, the approach is easy to use: “Cascade often requires no changes at all to the AI software,” Birman said.

With the new open-source release, Birman’s group hopes other researchers will explore possible uses for Cascade, making AI applications more widely accessible.

Funding for the development of Cascade came from the Air Force Research Laboratory, the National Science Foundation, the Norwegian Science Foundation, Microsoft, NVIDIA, Cisco and Siemens.

For additional information, read this Cornell Chronicle story.  

-30-

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

NIH study suggests maternal inflammation risk factors associated with children's behavioral and emotional regulation

2023-12-07
Maternal inflammation risk factors may be associated with dysregulation in children, according to a study funded by the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Program at the National Institutes of Health. “Dysregulation” in this context refers to children’s attention, anxiety and depression, and aggression being measurably different from what is typically expected at their age.  While inflammation is a normal bodily response to injury or infection, ECHO investigators wanted to learn whether factors linked ...

Cancer: Towards a new treatment for leukaemia

2023-12-07
Around 320,000 new cases of leukaemia, a type of blood cancer that can affect all population groups, are diagnosed every year in Europe. In children, cases of leukaemia make up a third of diagnosed cancers. Chemotherapy is the main treatment for leukaemia. Often, the exact cause cannot be identified and the molecular and cellular mechanisms responsible for leukaemia remain shrouded in mystery. Discovering new detection methods and new treatments to eradicate leukaemia is therefore a major challenge in oncology. Messenger RNA has been in the news in recent months, in connection with COVID-19 vaccinations. In an article published in Molecular Cell, researchers ...

Wasps that recognize faces cooperate more, may be smarter

2023-12-07
ITHACA, N.Y. – A new study of paper wasps suggests social interactions may make animals smarter. The research offers behavioral evidence of an evolutionary link between the ability to recognize individuals and social cooperation. Furthermore, genomic sequencing revealed that populations of wasps that recognized each other – and cooperated more – showed recent adaptations (positive selection) in areas of the brain associated with cognitive abilities such as learning, memory and vision. The study focused on two distinct populations of paper wasps (Polistes fuscatus): A southern ...

Key to fatty liver disease and its consequences for billions of people

2023-12-07
Key to fatty liver disease and its consequences for billions of people The global rise in obesity and diabetes is leading to an epidemic in fatty liver disease affecting 20-30 per cent of the world’s population. Almost a third of people with fatty liver disease go on to develop an advanced form of the disease, known as non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) that can progress to cirrhosis and end-stage liver disease, or even liver cancer, and is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Why some people remain relatively healthy with fatty liver disease and some go onto potentially life-threatening illness has been a mystery. Until now. A study ...

It turns out, this fossil plant is really a fossil baby turtle

It turns out, this fossil plant is really a fossil baby turtle
2023-12-07
From the 1950s to the 1970s, a Colombian priest named Padre Gustavo Huertas collected rocks and fossils near a town called Villa de Levya. Two of the specimens he found were small, round rocks patterned with lines that looked like leaves; he classified them as a type of fossil plant. But in a new study, published in the journal Palaeontologia Electronica, researchers re-examined these “plant” fossils and found that they weren’t plants at all: they were the fossilized remains of baby turtles. “It was truly surprising to find these fossils,” says Héctor Palma-Castro, a paleobotany student at the Universidad Nacional de Colombia. The plants in question ...

Novel and promising pancreatic cancer organoids for effective screening of anticancer drugs

Novel and promising pancreatic cancer organoids for effective screening of anticancer drugs
2023-12-07
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), that arises from pancreatic epithelial cells, is the most common form of pancreatic cancer, with a very high mortality rate. This elevated mortality is associated with the unique tumor microenvironment (TME), known for increased resistance to chemotherapy and high metastatic potential. TME is characterized by the presence of a complex stromal structure comprising cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), tumor endothelial cells (TECs), and a variety of immune cells. CAFs are specific cells, primarily involved in the overall aggressiveness and spread of cancer cells. These cells can further be categorized into several types based on their ...

New certification applies proven science to tobacco cessation treatment

2023-12-07
DALLAS, December 7, 2023 — The Tobacco Endgame — the path to ending tobacco use and nicotine addiction in the U.S. — is within sight, but there has been a sharp increase in electronic cigarette use among high school students, from 1.5% in 2011 to about 27.4% in 2019.[1] The American Heart Association, the world’s leading nonprofit organization focused on heart and brain health for all, is collaborating with the Association for the Treatment of Tobacco Use and Dependence (ATTUD) to change that. New individual certification as a Certified Professional by the American Heart Association – Tobacco Treatment is ...

Ancient Balkan genomes trace the rise and fall of Roman Empire’s frontier, reveal Slavic migrations to southeastern Europe

2023-12-07
A multidisciplinary study led by the Institute of Evolutionary Biology in Spain (a joint center of the Spanish National Research Council and Pompeu Fabra University), the University of Belgrade in Serbia, the University of Western Ontario in Canada, and Harvard University in the USA, reconstructs the genomic history of the Balkan Peninsula during the first millennium of the common era, a time and place of profound demographic, cultural and linguistic change. The team has recovered and analyzed whole genome data from 146 ancient people excavated primarily from Serbia and Croatia—more than a third of which came from the ...

Ancient DNA analysis reveals how the rise and fall of the Roman Empire shifted populations in the Balkans

Ancient DNA analysis reveals how the rise and fall of the Roman Empire shifted populations in the Balkans
2023-12-07
Despite the Roman Empire’s extensive military and cultural influence on the nearby Balkan peninsula, a DNA analysis of individuals who lived in the region between 1 and 1000 CE found no genetic evidence of Iron Age Italian ancestry. Instead, a study published December 7 in the journal Cell revealed successive waves of migrations from Western Anatolia, central and northern Europe, and the Pontic-Kazakh Steppe during the Empire’s reign. From the 7th century CE onwards (coincident with the fall of the Western Roman Empire), large numbers of people emigrated from Eastern Europe, likely related to the arrival of Slavic-speaking populations, which ...

Why presence of healthy cells enables cancer to resist treatment

2023-12-07
Chemotherapy becomes less effective because healthy cells push cancer cells to grow more slowly, according to two studies from researchers at UCL and Yale. In the two studies, supported by Cancer Research UK and published in Cell, researchers used ‘mini-tumours’ and the latest single-cell analysis technologies to begin to solve the puzzle of why healthy cells in a patient’s bowel cancer tumour might lead to poor outcomes. Bowel cancer kills over 900,000 people a year and is the second highest cause of cancer mortality worldwide. In the UK, it accounts for 10% of all cancer deaths. In the first study, UCL researchers used the latest single-cell analysis ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Arctic fossils reveal complex and diverse Early Triassic marine vertebrate communities

Ancient DNA shows dogs joined human migrations and trade

Magnetically guided microrobots for targeted drug delivery

Microrobots finding their way

‘Beautiful energy sandwich’ could power next-generation solar and lighting

Which came first: The sponge or the comb jelly? HHMI scientists weigh in

Extensive dog diversity millennia before modern breeding practices

Oldest oceanic reptile ecosystem from the Age of Dinosaurs found on Arctic island

Scientists call on better regulation for chemical cocktails in Europe

Pitt researchers reveal hidden impacts of drinking-water treatment on urban streams

Paleogenomics: humans and dogs spread across Eurasia together

Digital access improves convenience — but cannot fully replace physical services

ESE publishes Revised Clinical Practice Guideline for Treatment of Chronic Hypoparathyroidism in Adults

Stinky socks help replace human bait in surveys for blinding disease – new research

COP30 climate pledges favour land-based carbon removal over emission cuts

How fishes of the deep sea have evolved into different shapes

Hepatosplenic volumes and portal pressure gradient identify one-year further decompensation risk post-transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt

The link between the gut microbiome and autism is not backed by science, researchers say

Pig kidney functions normally for two months in brain-dead recipient

Immune reactions found behind human rejection of transplanted pig kidneys

Scientists use stem cells to move closer to large-scale manufacturing of platelets

High-engagement social media posts related to prescription drug promotion for 3 major drug classes

Ultraprocessed food consumption and risk of early-onset colorectal cancer precursors among women

New study could help your doctor make smarter treatment decisions

Study finds adults who consumed more ultra-processed foods had higher rates of precursors of early-onset colorectal cancer

Pancreatic cancer research project attacks ‘seeds of metastasis’

How can AI sentiment analysis apply to complex medical diagnoses?

1st death linked to ‘meat allergy’ spread by ticks

The role of hepatic SIRT1: From metabolic regulation to immune modulation and multi-target therapeutic strategies

Lymphoma and targeted therapy: resistance mechanisms and future solutions

[Press-News.org] New open-source platform cuts costs for running AI