000 02533nam a22002417a 4500
001 9828
003 IN-BhIIT
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008 201223b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9783319219028
040 _aIN-BhIIT
041 _aeng
082 0 4 _a005.11
_bNIE/I
100 1 _aNielsen, Frank.
_eauthor.
_915043
245 1 0 _aIntroduction to HPC with MPI for Data Science /
_cby Frank Nielsen.
260 _aSwitzerland :
_bSpringer,
_c2016.
300 _a1 online resource, XXXIII, 282 p. :
_bages 101 illustrations in color . ;
_c24 cm.
490 1 _aUndergraduate Topics in Computer Science,
520 _aThis gentle introduction to High Performance Computing (HPC) for Data Science using the Message Passing Interface (MPI) standard has been designed as a first course for undergraduates on parallel programming on distributed memory models, and requires only basic programming notions. Divided into two parts the first part covers high performance computing using C++ with the Message Passing Interface (MPI) standard followed by a second part providing high-performance data analytics on computer clusters. In the first part, the fundamental notions of blocking versus non-blocking point-to-point communications, global communications (like broadcast or scatter) and collaborative computations (reduce), with Amdalh and Gustafson speed-up laws are described before addressing parallel sorting and parallel linear algebra on computer clusters. The common ring, torus and hypercube topologies of clusters are then explained and global communication procedures on these topologies are studied. This first part closes with the MapReduce (MR) model of computation well-suited to processing big data using the MPI framework. In the second part, the book focuses on high-performance data analytics. Flat and hierarchical clustering algorithms are introduced for data exploration along with how to program these algorithms on computer clusters, followed by machine learning classification, and an introduction to graph analytics. This part closes with a concise introduction to data core-sets that let big data problems be amenable to tiny data problems. Exercises are included at the end of each chapter in order for students to practice the concepts learned, and a final section contains an overall exam which allows them to evaluate how well they have assimilated the material covered in the book.
650 0 _aComputer programming.
_915044
650 1 4 _aProgramming Techniques.
_915045
942 _cTRB
999 _c11433
_d11433