Atomistic Visualization of Mesoscopic Whole-Cell Simulations Using Ray-Casted Instancing

Molecular visualization is an important tool for analysing the results of biochemical simulations. With modern GPU ray casting approaches, it is only possible to render several million of atoms interactively unless advanced acceleration methods are employed. Whole‐cell simulations consist of at leas...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inComputer graphics forum Vol. 32; no. 8; pp. 195 - 206
Main Authors Falk, Martin, Krone, Michael, Ertl, Thomas
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.12.2013
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ISSN0167-7055
1467-8659
1467-8659
DOI10.1111/cgf.12197

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Summary:Molecular visualization is an important tool for analysing the results of biochemical simulations. With modern GPU ray casting approaches, it is only possible to render several million of atoms interactively unless advanced acceleration methods are employed. Whole‐cell simulations consist of at least several billion atoms even for simplified cell models. However, many instances of only a few different proteins occur in the intracellular environment, which can be exploited to fit the data into the graphics memory. For each protein species, one model is stored and rendered once per instance. The proposed method exploits recent algorithmic advances for particle rendering and the repetitive nature of intracellular proteins to visualize dynamic results from mesoscopic simulations of cellular transport processes. We present two out‐of‐core optimizations for the interactive visualization of data sets composed of billions of atoms as well as details on the data preparation and the employed rendering techniques. Furthermore, we apply advanced shading methods to improve the image quality including methods to enhance depth and shape perception besides non‐photorealistic rendering methods. We also show that the method can be used to render scenes that are composed of triangulated instances, not only implicit surfaces. Molecular visualization is an important tool for analyzing the results of biochemical simulations. With modern GPU ray casting approaches it is only possible to render several million of atoms interactively unless advanced acceleration methods are employed. Whole‐cell simulations consist of at least several billion atoms even for simplified cell models. However, many instances of only a few different proteins occur in the intracellular environment, which can be exploited to fit the data into the graphics memory. For each protein species, one model is stored and rendered once per instance. The proposed method exploits recent algorithmic advances for particle rendering and the repetitive nature of intracellular proteins to visualize dynamic results from mesoscopic simulations of cellular transport processes with implicit surfaces and triangular meshes.
Bibliography:istex:19D005218075FE69DA7A2DD66AFFCCA86616E976
ark:/67375/WNG-DD6285ZR-P
ArticleID:CGF12197
German Research Foundation (DFG) within the Cluster of Excellence in Simulation Technology - No. EXC 310/1
Collaborative Research Centre SFB 716 at the University of Stuttgart
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ISSN:0167-7055
1467-8659
1467-8659
DOI:10.1111/cgf.12197