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Saad Alowayyed

Researcher at King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology

Publications -  11
Citations -  502

Saad Alowayyed is an academic researcher from King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Supercomputer & Load balancing (computing). The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 11 publications receiving 421 citations. Previous affiliations of Saad Alowayyed include University of Amsterdam.

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Genome sequence of the date palm Phoenix dactylifera L

TL;DR: Genomic sequence analysis demonstrates that P. dactylifera experienced a clear genome-wide duplication after either ancient whole genome duplications or massive segmental duplications, and genetic diversity analysis indicates that its stress resistance and sugar metabolism-related genes tend to be enriched in the chromosomal regions where the density of single-nucleotide polymorphisms is relatively low.
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Parallel performance of an IB-LBM suspension simulation framework

TL;DR: Ficsion, a general purpose parallel suspension solver, employing the Immersed-Boundary lattice-Boltzmann method (IB-LBM), demonstrates a fairly good, close to linear scaling, both in the weak and strong scaling scenarios.
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Multiscale Computing in the Exascale Era

TL;DR: This work proposes multiscale computing patterns as a generic vehicle to realise load balanced, fault tolerant and energy aware high performance multiscaling, and discusses the vision of how this may shape multiscales computing in the exascale era.
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Multiscale Computing in the Exascale Era

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose multiscale computing patterns as a generic vehicle to realize load balanced, fault tolerant and energy aware high performance multi-scale computing in the exascale era.
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Hemocell: a high-performance microscopic cellular library

TL;DR: A high-performance computational framework with validated cell-material models, which provides the necessary tool to target challenging biophysical questions in relation to blood flows, e.g. the influence of transport characteristics on platelet bonding and aggregation is presented.