Wild Thing

Friday, Feb. 1, 16:28 EDT

So Arvind Parthasarathi gets the prize for the coolest application of Sherlock mentioned at our new machine’s launch event (note:  the video starts a little after 28:20 on my computer, so you may need to scroll to get it to start).

The president of YarcData, which built Sherlock, Arvind noted that the batting and pitching records of major league baseball are just a big ol’ graph problem. We have data on pitchers’ performance throwing fastballs, curves, and for those few weirdoes, knuckle balls — and how often they’re hit, and by whom. You could even work in data about individual pitchers’ and batters’ performance as the game progresses.

Normally it would be like picking through so much cooked spaghetti to optimize all these relationships. Calculable, but not all that quickly. But thanks to Sherlock’s specialized architecture, which can investigate numerous possibilities in parallel, we can do this in real time. Think: which pitcher should I start given the opponent’s opening lineup? Should I relieve him now, or wait for a different part of their rotation? With whom?

Pirates, we are looking for projects to work on Sherlock. You may want to think about making use of every local resource available. I’m just sayin’, is all …

About Ken Chiacchia

Ken Chiacchia's bio reads like a random sampling of events from different people's lives. The senior science writer at PSC, Ken has been a biochemist, a public relations writer, a freelance newspaper reporter, a science fiction author, an emergency responder, and a hobby farmer. A volunteer dog handler and wilderness EMT with Allegheny Mountain Rescue Group of Pittsburgh, he lives with his wife, dog trainer and writer Heather Houlahan, and an assorted cloud of canine partners and fosters, barn cats, chickens, turkeys, ducks, and goats, on a 26-acre farm in Harmony, Pa.
This entry was posted in General and tagged , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.

Media Contacts

Media Contact(s):

Ken Chiacchia
Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
chiacchi@psc.edu
412.268.4960
 
Shandra Williams
Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
shandraw@psc.edu
412.268.4960

Projects in Scientific Computing, 2012

PSC's Annual Research Report

Projects2012

Subscriptions: You can receive PSC news releases via e-mail. Send a blank e-mail to psc-wire-join@psc.edu.

News Archive: 2012, 201120102009

2008200720062005

2004200320022001

2000199919981997

1996199519941993


PSC Logo Download: PSC's logo is available for use in print, e-media and presentation application. Various formats are available here.

Use of PSC materials: To request permission to use PSC materials, please complete this form.