dc.contributor.author
Mutlu, Onur
dc.date.accessioned
2026-01-09T02:08:22Z
dc.date.available
2026-01-09T02:08:22Z
dc.date.issued
2022-09-06
dc.identifier
Mutlu, O. Accelerating genome analysis. A: Severo Ochoa Research Seminars at BSC. «8th Severo Ochoa Research Seminar Lectures at BSC, Barcelona, 2022-23». Barcelona: Barcelona Supercomputing Center, 2022, p. 8-10.
dc.identifier
https://hdl.handle.net/2117/449796
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/2117/449796
dc.description.abstract
Genome analysis is the foundation of many scientific and
medical discoveries as well as a key pillar of personalized
medicine. Any analysis of a genome fundamentally starts with
the reconstruction of the genome from its sequenced fragments.
This process is called read mapping. One key goal of read
mapping is to find the variations and similarities that are
present between the sequenced genome and reference
genome(s) and to tolerate the errors introduced by the genome
sequencing process. Read mapping is currently a major
bottleneck in the entire genome analysis pipeline because stateof-
the-art genome sequencing technologies are able to
sequence a genome much faster than the computational
techniques that are employed to reconstruct the genome. New
sequencing technologies, like nanopore sequencing, greatly
exacerbate this problem while at the same time making genome
sequencing much less costly.
This talk describes our ongoing journey in greatly improving
the performance of genome read mapping as well as broader
genome analysis. We first provide a brief background on read
mappers that can comprehensively find genomic
variations/similarities and tolerate sequencing errors. Then, we
describe both algorithmic and hardware-based acceleration
approaches. Algorithmic approaches exploit the structure of the
genome, the structure of the problem at hand, as well as the structure of the underlying hardware. Hardware-based
acceleration approaches exploit specialized microarchitectures
or new execution paradigms like processing in memory. We
show that significant improvements are possible with both
algorithmic and hardware-based approaches and their
combination. We conclude with a foreshadowing of future
challenges brought about by very low-cost new sequencing
technologies and their potential use cases in public health,
science, and medicine.
dc.format
application/pdf
dc.publisher
Barcelona Supercomputing Center
dc.rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
dc.rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
dc.subject
Àrees temàtiques de la UPC::Informàtica::Arquitectura de computadors
dc.subject
High performance computing
dc.subject
Càlcul intensiu (Informàtica)
dc.title
Accelerating genome analysis
dc.type
Conference report