IBM's Watson computing system to cure malaria with Scripps CIO Staff Writer
When IBM's Watson computing system bested two human competitors on the Jeopardy! game show, The Scripps Research Institute received some of the $1 million first-place prize money. Now, Scripps is launching a project to identify treatments for malaria, partially funded by the winnings -- and it needs help from the general public to make it even more successful.
Why malaria? For one thing, this is one of the world's three deadliest infectious diseases. Many strains of malaria have become resistant to available drugs. In 2006, 247 million people became infected with malaria -- the leading cause of death in Africa for those under age five.
According to the World Health Organization, malaria is both a disease of poverty and a cause of poverty. Where prevalent, the disease can account for 40 percent of all public health costs.
To find a cure for this scourge, Scripps is is compressing 100 years of research into just one year by crunching numbers and performing simulations on IBM's World Community Grid, which pools the spare power of volunteers'PCs all over the world. Researchers will use it to evaluate millions of compounds that might advance the development of drugs to cure mutant,drug-resistant strains of malaria. Data from the experiments will be made available to the public. If we can grow the number of laptops and PCs providing idle computer cycles to the research, we can find new treatments even sooner. It's safe and secure, and just takes a couple of minutes at
Most commented