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{{Short description|Interdisciplinary research center in Louisiana, US}}
'''CCT: Center for Computation & Technology '''▼
The '''Center for Computation and Technology''' ('''CCT''') is an interdisciplinary [[research center]] located on the campus of [[Louisiana State University]] in [[Baton Rouge, Louisiana]].
CCT's first director was [[Ed Seidel]]. Seidel led the CCT from 2003 to 2008, then accepted a position as director of the National Science Foundation's Office of Cyberinfrastructure (OCI). CCT faculty members Stephen David Beck and [[Jorge Pullin]] served as Interim Co-directors from 2008 to 2010. In December 2010, Joel Tohline, the interim director of the original LSU CAPITAL, was named CCT director.
▲LSU previously housed the Center for Applied Information Technology & Learning, called LSU CAPITAL. In 2003, LSU CAPITAL was integrated as a full research center on LSU’s campus and renamed the Center for Computation & Technology.
CCT employs 30 full-time faculty members, all of whom hold joint appointments with other LSU departments, such as the Department of Computer Science, the College of Basic Sciences, and the College of Music and Dramatic Arts, in five Focus Areas: Core Computing Sciences, Coast to Cosmos, Material World, Cultural Computing, and System Science & Engineering. The center has a Cyberinfrastructure Development (CyD) division, originally led by Daniel S. Katz, then Shantenu Jha, and now Steven Brandt; and, in partnership with the LSU ITS department, a group called HPC@LSU that provides support for the campus and statewide cyberinfrastructure, led by Honggao Liu. CCT employees about 100 students and staff, including research and post-doctoral staff, and undergraduate and graduate students.
The CCT is primarily located in Johnston Hall on the LSU campus, but offices and cyberinfrastructure also are housed in the Frey Computing Services Center.
▲In addition to Director Ed Seidel, staff at the CCT include Gabrielle Allen, Ph.D., computer scientist and co-creator of the Cactus Framework; Thomas Sterling, Ph.D., former NASA scientist and co-creator of the Beowulf class cluster that is a building block of the world’s supercomputers; and Susanne Brenner, Ph.D., recipient of the 2005 Humboldt Research Award.
Named for one of the
Tezpur
▲The CCT is primarily located in Johnston Hall on the LSU campus, but offices and cyberinfrastructure also are housed in the Frey Computing Services Center. LSU’s Supercomputer, SuperMike, was located in Frey and used for nearly five years for advanced research. In June 2007, SuperMike began being dismantled to make way for construction of the University’s new supercomputer, Tezpur.
CCT also houses the Laboratory for Creative Arts & Technology
▲Named for one of the world’s hottest peppers, Tezpur is nearly three times as fast as SuperMike, and is one of the most powerful supercomputers owned by any university in the nation. Tezpur also is one of the 50 most powerful supercomputers in the world.
▲Tezpur will be an integral part of allowing CCT researchers to use the resources of the Louisiana Optical Network Initiative, or LONI. LONI is a high-speed, fiber optic network that links supercomputers at the state’s major research institutions, allowing greater collaboration on research that produces results faster and with greater accuracy. LONI puts the state on the National Lambda Rail, allowing Louisiana researchers to collaborate with scientists around the country. With LONI, Louisiana possesses one of the most advanced networking environments in the world.
==References==
▲CCT also houses the Laboratory for Creative Arts & Technology, or LCAT, which provides a forum and facility for faculty and researchers from across the LSU campus to interact with CCT. The lab, located in Frey, houses dedicated research labs for audio, video and tangible technologies, as well as an Access Grid-enabled classroom, a10-Gbit networking and the Imaginarium (a large, open room with space for visualization research.)
{{Reflist}}
==External links==
* {{Official website|http://www.cct.lsu.edu}}
{{LSU}}
[[Category:Louisiana State University]]
[[Category:Computer science institutes]]
▲CCT is also the lead sponsor of the Red Stick International Animation Festival, [Red Stick http://www.redstickfestival.org], an annual event in downtown Baton Rouge that brings together artists, animators, filmmakers, computer scientists and also animation enthusiasts to showcase the latest developments in Louisiana's digital arts and technology sectors, which is leading to economic development for the state and the city.
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