U.S. and Korean Research Institutions
Link Laboratories to Advance Microscopy and Information
Technologies
Korean delegates from the Korean Basic Sciences Institute
(
KBSI)
joined UCSD Chancellor Robert Dynes and NCMIR Director Mark
Ellisman to sign a Memorandum of Understanding
(MoU) promoting international cooperation in information
technology, advanced analytical imaging, and biomedical
research. This July, that understanding will become accomplishment
as NCMIR begins testing the boundaries of its
Telescience;
technologies on Korea's new 1.25 MeV ultra high-voltage
electron microscope.
This microscope, one of the most technologically sophisticated
in the world, has been designed to support systems for
Telescience. Dr. Ellisman's NCMIR group developed
Telemicroscopy as part of their NIH-supported program
to develop advanced technologies for biomedical
investigations. The web portal interface for this technology
was created in partnership with the San Diego Supercomputer
Center (
SDSC)
and as part of the National Science Foundation -supported
program to develop a National Partnership for Advanced
Computational Infrastructure (
NPACI).
Ellisman's research group which has been leading the development
of Telescience innovations
for more than a decade, has pioneered the use of Telemicroscopy
with high performance instruments at the NCMIR and
with the world's largest microscope (3.0 MeV)
at the Center for Ultra-High Voltage Electron Microscopy
at Osaka University in Japan.
Access to these microscopes is vital to researchers because
of a gap in local resources; the U.S. has not
placed a high voltage electron microscope in service for
biomedical research since the early 1970s. To improve
the resolution, speed and accessibility to data, obtained from these microscopes,
NCMIR and the California Institute for Telecommunications
and Information Technology (
Cal-(IT)2)
are developing network infrastructure that will establish
an all-optical core for the Internet with wireless extensions
throughout the physical world.
With KBSI, NCMIR will improve and extend these web-based
Telemicroscopy technologies to enhance seamless access
to integrated resources for distributed data management
and high performance computation and to improve tools for collaborative
visualization.
Korean officials joining UCSD to promote this collaboration
included the Chief Director of the
Korea
Research Council of Fundamental Science & Technology
, Dr. Myung Sai Chung, and Korean Basic Sciences Institute
President, Dr. Jung-Soon Lee. Dr. Lee, who championed
this opportunity to increase the exchange of scientific
information acquired through one-of-a-kind instruments,
indicated KBSI's pleasure at "building a foundation
of strong operational ties" with the U.S.
and UCSD.
"This is a win-win situation for the U.S./UCSD
and Korea/KBSI," said Ellisman. "NCMIR
will be able to establish trans-Pacific use of an instrument
that would otherwise be unavailable to us due to its
location and financial restrictions, and the Koreans
will be able to enhance their own research capabilities
by applying our technologies. "
The agreement encourages the exchange of information,
technology, and personnel, by recommending that scientists
and engineers give lectures, conduct seminars, and
engage in workshops and research areas in both countries.
This July will see the beginning of that collaboration
as NCMIR and KBSI scientists begin experimenting with
the international capabilities of the Telescience
Portal.
The National Institutes of Health (
NIH)
supports this collaboration. According to Dr. Judy Vaitukaitis,
director of the National Center for Research Resources
(
NCRR)
at NIH, this is an excellent example of the beneficial
use of technologies developed under the NIH umbrella and
a further step towards promoting worldwide cooperation
to accelerate the pace of discovery.
Electron microscopes use a beam of highly energetic electrons
to enable detailed structural studies of biological specimens
like a thick sample of heart or brain tissue at an extremely
high resolution. For example, the new high voltage electron
microscope being installed in Korea can identify structures
approaching atomic resolution. This new instrument was
manufactured by Japanese Electron Optics Laboratory (
JEOL)
in Tokyo, which has been collaborating with NCMIR
for more than 15 years on the design of new advanced electron
microscopes for biomedical research.