IBM Research - Almaden Celebrates 30 Years of Innovation in Silicon Valley

San Jose-based lab fosters unique cross-discipline approach to spur technical innovations to help transform industries and society
IBM TrueNorth brain-inspired computer chip accepted into the Computer History Museum
PR Newswire

ARMONK, N.Y., Aug. 12, 2016 /PRNewswire/ -- IBM (NYSE: IBM) today announced the 30(th) anniversary of IBM Research - Almaden in San Jose, California. The research and development lab is known as the birthplace of the world's first hard-disk drive, the relational database, DVD and Blu-ray encryption technology and brain-inspired supercomputing chips. Almaden is one of IBM's 12 global research facilities. It moved into its current location in 1986.

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"What sets us aside from other research operations in Silicon Valley is our novel interdisciplinary approach to innovation," said Dr. Jeff Welser, vice president and lab director, IBM Research - Almaden. "Our most profound knowledge comes from non-traditional combinations of computer scientists, chemists, biologists, mathematicians, medical doctors or even artists from within our own lab. Coupled with the passion of our people, their beautiful ideas and IBM's robust technology offerings, we are uniquely empowered to speed the discovery of solutions to complex global problems."

To commemorate Almaden's 30(th) Anniversary, IBM announced the donation of an original IBM TrueNorth brain-inspired supercomputing chip array, designed for artificial intelligence and cognitive computing, to the Computer History Museum. TrueNorth's brain-like, neural network architecture, which breaks path with the 70-year-old legacy of the von Neumann architecture, is able to infer complex cognitive tasks such as pattern recognition and integrated sensory processing far more efficiently in terms of energy and speed than conventional computer architecture.

Today, Almaden's researchers are discovering new technologies and creating cognitive solutions to address major business and global challenges. Examples of recent research include:

    --  New Method to Use Grocery Retail-Scanner Data to Speed Investigations
        During Early Foodborne Illness Outbreaks: Today, IBM announced that
        Almaden researchers have discovered that analyzing retail-scanner data
        from grocery stores against maps of confirmed cases of foodborne illness
        can speed early investigations. In the study, researchers used 10
        laboratory-confirmed reports of food poisoning to narrow down the
        investigation to approximately 12 suspect food products in just a few
        hours. The method combined the expertise of retailers, computer
        scientists and public health experts to make the discovery.
    --  New Chemical Catalyst to Create Cheaper, Biodegradable Plastics from
        Plants: IBM also announced today that Almaden-based researchers have
        identified a chemical catalyst that can be used to create cheaper,
        biodegradable plastics from plants such as palm trees and beets. These
        inexpensive plastics can be used for making common consumer plasticware,
        such as eating utensils, as well as medical devices. The project used
        cognitive technologies and computer modeling for analysis to perfect
        in-lab chemical reactions.
    --  New Scientific Discipline -- Cellular Engineering -- Pioneered by
        Almaden Researchers: IBM Research, in collaboration with UC San
        Francisco, is using image recognition and machine learning to find a
        direct connection between how cells structure themselves and the
        function they perform. The alliance has produced a new field of study
        called cellular engineering, which can help discover the links between
        healthy and cancerous cells. This new discipline uses cell biology,
        physics, mathematics and computer science along with large health
        datasets and cognitive computing to provide IBM Watson with "microscopic
        eyes" and establish novel ways to treat disease.
    --  Continued Momentum on Brain-Inspired Computing: Researchers are leading
        momentum around the rapidly growing TrueNorth Software Ecosystem that is
        now in the hands of more than 125 researchers at more than 40 leading
        universities, government agencies, national and corporate labs.
        Recently, Lawrence Livermore National Lab began using a 16-chip
        neuromorphic system to explore supercomputing capabilities important to
        the National Nuclear Security Administration's (NNSA) missions in cyber
        security, stewardship of the nation's nuclear deterrent and
        non-proliferation.

The IBM TrueNorth Project also received the inaugural Misha Mahowald Prize, recognizing outstanding achievement in the field of neuromorphic engineering. Dr. Misha Mahowald, for whom the prize is named, was an influential pioneer of neuromorphic engineering. Although Dr. Mahowald's life ended prematurely, her novel designs of brain-inspired circuits for vision and computation have continued to influence a generation of engineers.

"IBM Research - Almaden continues to accelerate its pace, both in making key scientific breakthroughs and applying them to build solutions that can impact people around the world. IBM Research is proud to invest in a dedicated team of researchers who continue to push innovation forward in today's cognitive era of computing," said Dr. Arvind Krishna, senior vice president and director, IBM Research.

IBM Researchers based at Almaden and alumni have been celebrated with prestigious science and technology awards including the Nobel Prize for Chemistry (2014), Millennium Technology Prize (2014), Kavli Prize in Nanoscience (2010), A.M. Turning Award (1998) and the National Medal of Technology and Innovation (1985).

Resources

    --  Infographic/Social Media Tile: IBM Research - Almaden 30(th) Anniversary
    --  Site and Executive Photos

About IBM Research

For more than seven decades, IBM Research continues to define the future of information technology with more than 3,000 researchers in 12 labs located across six continents. Scientists from IBM Research have produced six Nobel Laureates, 10 U.S. National Medals of Technology, five U.S. National Medals of Science, six Turing Awards, 19 inductees in the National Academy of Sciences and 20 inductees into the U.S. National Inventors Hall of Fame.

For more information about IBM Research, visit www.research.ibm.com.

Media Contacts

Chris Blake Caroline Yu Vespi
IBM Research IBM Research - Almaden
External Relations External Relations
blakechr@us.ibm.com cvespi@us.ibm.com
415-613-1120 925-212-9184

 

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SOURCE IBM Research