A panoramic view of snow-covered Mt. Hood in Oregon at dusk.

OREGON INNOVATES

The best way to have a good idea is to have a lot of ideas.

– Linus Pauling, two-time Nobel Laureate, native Oregonian

Oregon’s largest public research universities are home to leading-edge innovation in a variety of domains. Link Oregon provides state-of-the-art fiber connectivity services to these institutions, enabling high-speed secure collaboration and data exchanges within and across these universities. Below are a few of the many interinstitutional, interdisciplinary research initiatives we highlighted at SC24, the international conference for high performance computing, this year. Feel free to explore more!

Oregon State University logo
Oregon Health and Science University logo
University of Oregon logo
Portland State Universty logo
Oregon Institute of Technology
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The Future of Biomedical Research

Oregon Health & Science University’s (OHSU) Knight Cancer Institute and University of Oregon’s (UO) Phil and Penny Knight Campus for Accelerating Scientific Impact collaborate on interdisciplinary research spanning areas such as computer vision, natural language processing, computational biology and bioinformatics, data visualization, and interpretable AI-enabled health to advance cures for cancer.  

Oregon Health and Science University logo
University of Oregon logo

Advancing Multi-disciplinary Science Research

The Jen-Hsun Huang and Lori Mills Huang Collaborative Innovation Complex (opening planned for 2026), situated on Oregon State University’s (OSU) Corvallis campus, will be a dynamic home to one of the nation’s most powerful supercomputers.

The 150,000-square-foot center, spearheaded by a landmark gift from NVIDIA founder/CEO Jen-Hsun Huang and his wife Lori Mills Huang, both OSU graduates, will accelerate work at OSU’s top-ranked programs in agriculture, computer sciences, climate science, forestry, oceanography, robotics, water resources, materials sciences and more with the help of AI. Once built, the center’s supercomputing capabilities will be available to other Oregon universities, helping advance HPC research and related innovation across the state.

Oregon State University logo
Nvidia logo
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A research vessel traveling in waters off the coast of Oregon.

Understanding our Changing Oceans

Funded by the National Science Foundation, the Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI) is an advanced system of integrated, scientific platforms and sensors that measures physical, chemical, geological, and biological properties and processes from the seafloor to the sea surface in key coastal and open-ocean sites of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The OOI Cyberinfrastructure, which is operated by Oregon State University, manages and integrates data collected by the hundreds of instruments deployed across the arrays, linking the marine infrastructure to researchers, students and educators.

Oregon State University logo
NSF Ocean Observatories Initiative

Oregon Research Computing Accelerator (Orca)

The Oregon Regional Computing Accelerator (Orca) will provide free-of-cost computing resources and cyberinfrastructure to colleges in the region, with a special emphasis on rural, regional and minority-serving institutions that otherwise wouldn’t have access to cost-prohibitive computational resources. The high-performance computing cluster at Portland State University is funded by a nearly $1 million grant from the National Science Foundation’s Campus Cyberinfrastructure program.  

Portland State Universty logo
National Science Foundation (NSF) logo

Award # 2346732

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Two members of the Cascadia Region Earthquake Science Center take readings from equipment in a remote mountainou s area.

Understanding Seismic/Tsunami Hazards

Cascadia Region Earthquake Science Center (CRESCENT) is the nation’s first subduction zone earthquake hazards center. The Center’s research involves analysis of large datasets using machine learning, earthquake and tsunami simulations using high-performance computing, and bringing a community of experts together to achieve common goals. CRESCENT facilitates these efforts using cloud-based cyberinfrastructure and access to a team of developers that support center activities. The first National Science Foundation-funded subduction zone earthquake science center is a large-scale collaborative effort with participating research universities in Oregon and across the nation and led by the University of Oregon.

Cascadia Region Earthquake Science Center logo
National Science Foundation (NSF) logo

Award # 2225286

Oregon State University logo
Portland State Universty logo
University of Oregon logo

Building Sustainable Global Internet Communities

Network Startup Resource Center, headquartered at the University of Oregon, provides lab-based technical training courses and network engineering assistance to improve affordable Internet access and services across the globe. The NSRC helps develop national and regional Internet infrastructure for collaborative research, education, and international partnerships, working directly with the indigenous network engineers and operators who develop and maintain the Internet infrastructure in their respective countries and regions.

Network Startup Resource Center (NSRC) logo
University of Oregon logo
National Science Foundation (NSF) logo

Award # 1451045

NSRC staff and community members huddle around a laptop on the roof of a building.
A photo illustration of netowk nodes connected by lines overlaying an aerial photo of a rural landscape.

Oregon’s Research and Education Network

Link Oregon is a facilities-based, middle-mile provider of high-speed, fiber-optic broadband connectivity to Oregon’s public and non-profit sectors. Sectors served include K-12, higher education, libraries, Tribes, public healthcare organizations, remote state offices, and other public and non-profit organizations and facilities across Oregon. Link Oregon’s advanced, high-capacity network will eventually serve more than 600+ locations across the state of Oregon, making it easier for these entities to collaborate, share information and deliver services to Oregon’s residents and visitors. Its founding members include the State of Oregon and four of Oregon’s largest research universities – OHSU, Oregon State University, Portland State University and University of Oregon.

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