
Master the robust features of R parallel programming to accelerate your data science computations
Simon R. Chapple is a highly experienced solution architect and lead software
engineer with more than 25 years of developing innovative solutions and applications in data
analysis and healthcare informatics. He is also an expert in supercomputer HPC and big data
processing. Simon is the chief technology officer and a managing partner of Datalytics
Technology Ltd, where he leads a team building the next generation of a large scale data
analysis platform, based on a customizable set of high performance tools, frameworks, and
systems, which enables the entire life cycle of data processing for real-time analytics from
capture through analysis to presentation, to be encapsulated for easy deployment into any
existing operational IT environment. Previously, he was director of Product Innovation at
Aridhia Informatics, where he built a number of novel systems for healthcare providers in
Scotland, including a unified patient pathway tracking system that utilized ten separate data
system integrations for both 18-weeks Referral To Treatment and cancer patient management
(enabling the provider to deliver best performance on patient waiting times in Scotland). He
also built a unique real-time chemotherapy patient mobile-based public cloud-hosted monitoring
system undergoing clinical trial in Australia, which is highly praised by nurses and patients,
"its like having a nurse in your living room… hopefully all chemo patients will one day know the
security and comfort of having an around-the-clock angel of their own." Simon is also a coauthor
of the ROpenCL open source package—enabling statistics programs written in R to exploit the
parallel computation within graphics accelerator chips.Sloan Terence :
Terence Sloan is a software development group manager at EPCC, the High
Performance Computing Centre at the University of Edinburgh. He has more than 25 years of
experience in managing and participating in data science and HPC projects with Scottish SMEs, UK
corporations, and European and global collaborations. Terry, was the co-principal investigator
on the Wellcome Trust (Award no. 086696/Z/08/Z), the BBSRC (Award no. BB/J019283/1), and the
three EPSRC-distributed computational science awards that have helped develop the SPRINT package
for R. He has also held awards from the ESRC (Award nos. RES-189-25-0066, RES-149-25-0005) that
investigated the use of operational big data for customer behavior analysis. Terry is a
coordinator for the Data Analytics with HPC, Project Preparation, and Dissertation courses on
the University of Edinburgh's MSc programme, in HPC with Data Science. He also plays the
drums.Forster Thorsten :
Thorsten Forster is a data science researcher at University of Edinburgh. With
a background in statistics and computer science, he has obtained a PhD in biomedical sciences
and has over 10 years of experience in this interdisciplinary research. Conducting research on
the data analysis approach to biomedical big data rooted in statistics and machine learning
(such as microarrays and next-generation sequencing), Thorsten has been a project manager on the
SPRINT project, which is targeted at allowing lay users to make use of parallelized analysis
solutions for large biological datasets within the R statistical programming language. He is
also a co-founder of Fios Genomics Ltd, a university spun-out company providing biomedical big
data research with data-analytical services. Thorsten's current work includes devising a gene
transcription classifier for the diagnosis of bacterial infections in newborn babies,
transcriptional profiling of interferon gamma activation of macrophages, investigating the role
of cholesterol in immune responses to infections, and investigating the genomic factors that
cause childhood wheezing to progress to asthma. Thorsten's complete profile is available at
http://tinyurl.com/ThorstenForster-UEDIN.Troup Eilidh :
Eilidh Troup is an Applications Consultant employed by EPCC at the University of Edinburgh. She has a degree in Genetics from the University of Glasgow and she now focuses on making high-performance computing accessible to a wider range of users, in particular biologists. Eilidh works on a variety of software projects, including the Simple Parallel R INTerface (SPRINT) and the SEEK for Science web-based data repository.