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Multi-simulation coordinator

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

MUSIC (Multi-Simulation Coordinator) is software developed and released by the INCF and Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) School of Computer Science and Communication in Stockholm, Sweden.[1] MUSIC is designed for interconnecting large scale neuronal network simulators, either with each other or with other tools.[2] It allows spike events and continuous time series to be communicated between such applications in a cluster computer. The typical usage cases are connecting models developed for different simulators and connecting a parallel simulator to a post-processing tool.

MUSIC provides a standardized software interface (API) on top of the message-passing interface (MPI) for communication among parallel applications for large-scale computational neuroscience simulations. It enables the transfer of massive amounts of event information and continuous values from one parallel application to another, including those using different data allocation strategies.[3] In the design of the standard interface, care was taken to allow easy adaptation of existing simulators and to permit third-party development and community-sharing of reusable and interoperable software tools for parallel processing. Three simulators currently have MUSIC interfaces: Moose, NEURON and NEST.[4]

The MUSIC software library and its documentation are publicly available through the INCF Software Center.[5]

References

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  1. ^ msandstr. "The MUlti-SImulator Coordinator (MUSIC) — INCF Neuroinformatics Portal". www.incf.org. Archived from the original on 2015-11-21. Retrieved 2015-11-20.
  2. ^ "MUSIC - Multi-Simulation Coordinator Request for Comments" (PDF).
  3. ^ Djurfeldt, Mikael (2010-03-02). "Run-Time Interoperability Between Neuronal Network Simulators Based on the MUSIC Framework". Neuroinformatics. 8 (1): 43–60. doi:10.1007/s12021-010-9064-z. PMC 2846392. PMID 20195795.
  4. ^ ylva. "MUSIC — INCF Neuroinformatics Portal". www.incf.org. Archived from the original on 2015-11-21. Retrieved 2015-11-20.
  5. ^ "MUSIC — INCF Software Center". software.incf.org. Retrieved 2015-11-20.
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