Joel Saltz
Joel Saltz
Cherith Professor and Founding Chair
Vice President for Clinical Informatics, Stony Brook Medicine

Associate Director, Stony Brook Cancer Center
Department of Biomedical Informatics
HSC L3-043
Stony Brook University
Stony Brook, NY 11794

Phone
(631) 638-1420
Email
joel.saltz [at] stonybrookmedicine.edu
Interests
Biomedical Informatics, Imaging Informatics, Clinical & Translational Research Informatics and High-End Computing.
Biography

Dr. Joel Saltz is a leader in research on advanced information technologies for large scale data science and biomedical/scientific research. He has developed innovative pathology informatics methods, including: the first published whole slide virtual microscope system; pioneering pathology computer-aided diagnosis techniques; and methods for decomposing pathology images into features and linking those features to cancer “omics”, response to treatment and outcome. He has broken new ground in big data through development of the filter-stream based DataCutter system, the map-reduce style Active Data Repository and the inspector-executor runtime compiler framework. He has also been an active contributor in clinical informatics, having developed predictive models for hospital readmissions, point of care laboratory testing quality assurance systems, decision support systems for electrophoresis interpretation and graphical user interfaces to support clinical data warehouse queries. Dr. Saltz has been a pioneer in establishing the field of biomedical informatics; he founded and built two highly successful departments of biomedical informatics, one at Ohio State University and one at Emory University. In 2013, he came to Stony Brook as Vice President for Clinical Informatics and Founding Department Chair of Biomedical Informatics – to create a living laboratory for biomedical informatics and to create a third unique biomedical informatics department dually housed in the School of Medicine and the College of Engineering. Dr. Saltz is trained both as a computer scientist and as a physician through the MSTP program at Duke University. He has deep experience in computer science, having served on the computer science faculties at Yale University and the University of Maryland. He completed his residency in clinical pathology at Johns Hopkins University and he is a practicing, board-certified clinical pathologist.

Research

Dr. Saltz is a pioneer in developing Digital Pathology tools, methods and algorithms with the ultimate goal of extracting and leveraging digitalized Pathology information to better predict cancer outcome and to steer cancer therapy. He is also an expert in high end computing and has developed a variety of highly cited systems software methods.

His research in Pathology spans twenty years and consists of closely coordinated efforts in image analysis, machine learning, database design and high end computing. He has developed tools and methods  through years of funded projects supported by a wide range of institutes and agencies including NCI, NLM, NIBIB, NSF, DARPA, AFOSR, NASA, DOD and DOE. His seminal work in digital imaging laid the foundation for digital pathology as it is today.  He was the first to develop the “Virtual Microscope,” and pioneered developments in digital pathology whole slide image navigation, data management and computer aided classification.

Dr. Saltz’s initial efforts included development of the first whole slide image viewer, and devising efficient methods for management, caching and supporting analytics carried out on whole slide datasets. This work became the foundation of the new field of Pathology Imaging Informatics, today investigators he mentored can be found carrying out exciting research in  institutions across the country.

Over the years, Dr. Saltz has developed a rich set of Pathology informatics tools, methods and algorithms. For instance, he and his group have  recently developed a rich set of pipelines to compute a variety of biologically significant Pathology features, including spatial maps of tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs). The quantification of TILs is well documented to have prognostic value in many contexts; understanding patient immune response to tumors is increasingly important with the advance of cancer immunotherapy. For most cancer types, Pathologists do not comment on TILs in their reports and even in cancer types where TIL comments are sometimes made, they only use high level terms such as “brisk” or “sparse”. Dr. Saltz is able to  precisely quantify percent  tumor infiltrating lymphocytes and is also able to generate detailed TIL Maps.  He has used these methods to generate publicly available whole slide TIL maps and spatial statistics for 13 cancer types and 5,000 subjects – these are available on The Cancer Imaging Archive.  He is now extending and leveraging these methods in many other studies, as well as for the NCI SEER program.

Dr. Saltz  and collaborators have also developed a variety of machine learning methods to target analysis of whole slide images. This includes a variety of methods that target Neuroblastoma classification as well as methods that are able to leverage coarse grained whole slide training data through combining patch-level convolutional neural networks with supervised decision fusion. He achieved state-of-the-art results in predicting the subtypes of brain and lung tumors. Dr. Saltz has also developed innovative computational methods for carrying out data and computationally challenging image analysis and machine learning methods on whole slide Pathology images.  These methods are capable of taking advantage of highly scalable hybrid CPU/GPU architectures and are able to leverage capabilities provided by cloud and leadership class architectures including the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Summit platform. 

Finally, Dr. Saltz made  foundational contributions to data science through development of innovative methods for moving computation to data, development of a very early prototype map/reduce type framework, foundational methods for runtime compiler analysis of adaptive applications and analyses of key data structures employed in the management of spatial data (Hilbert Space-Filling Curves).

Joel Saltz received his MD and Computer Science PhD from the Medical Scientist Training Program at Duke University.  He was trained in Clinical Pathology at Johns Hopkins Medical School and served on the Johns Hopkins faculty as Professor and Director of Pathology Informatics.  He has launched new Departments of Biomedical Informatics at Stony Brook, Emory and Ohio State and has also served on the Computer Science faculty at Yale University and the University of Maryland College Park.

Joel Saltz,  Dimitris Samaras,  Tahsin Kurc, Chao Chen and Fusheng Wang form the Digital Pathology group at Stony Brook.  This closely integrated research group targets development of AI and machine learning algorithms, numerical methods, software tools and database architectures for digital Pathology and multi-scale tissue analysis.

1.         Saltz J, Sharma A, Iyer G, Bremer E, Wang F, Jasniewski A, DiPrima T, Almeida JS, Gao Y, Zhao T, Saltz M, Kurc T.  A Containerized Software System for Generation, Management and Exploration of Features from Whole Slide Tissue Images. Cancer Research. 2017 Nov 1; 77(21) PMID: 29092946; PMCID: PMC5987533

2.         Cooper LA, Kong J, Gutman DA, Wang F, Gao J, Appin C, Cholleti S, Pan T, Sharma A, Scarpace L, Mikkelsen T, Kurc T, Moreno CS, Brat DJ, Saltz JH. Integrated morphologic analysis for the identification and characterization of disease subtypes. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association: JAMIA 19, 317-323, doi:10.1136/amiajnl-2011-000700 (2012). PMID: 22278382; PMCID:PMC3277636

3.         Saltz, J., Gupta, R., Hou, L., Kurc, T., Singh, P., Nguyen, V., Samaras, D., Shroyer, K.R., Zhao, T., Batiste, R. and Van Arnam, J., 2018. Spatial organization and molecular correlation of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes using deep learning on pathology images. Cell reports, 23(1), p.181. DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.03.086   PMCID: PMC5943714

4.         Hou,L., Samaras, D., Kurc, T.,GaoY., Davis, J., Saltz,J., Patch-based Convolutional Neural Network for Whole Slide Tissue Image Classification. In Proceedings of the IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), 2016), Las Vegas, NV

5.         Kong, J. et al. Machine-based morphologic analysis of glioblastoma using whole-slide pathology images uncovers clinically relevant molecular correlates. PloS one 8, e81049, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0081049 (2013).

6.         Cooper, L. A. et al. Integrated morphologic analysis for the identification and characterization of disease subtypes. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA 19, 317-323, doi:10.1136/amiajnl-2011-000700 (2012).

7.         Cooper, L. A. et al. The tumor microenvironment strongly impacts master transcriptional regulators and gene expressiocn class of glioblastoma. The American journal of pathology 180, 2108-2119, doi:10.1016/j.ajpath.2012.01.040 (2012).

8.         Cooper, L. A. et al. An integrative approach for in silico glioma research. IEEE transactions on bio-medical engineering 57, 2617-2621, doi:10.1109/tbme.2010.2060338 (2010).

9.         Moon, B., Jagadish, H. V., Faloutsos, C. & Saltz, J. H. Analysis of the clustering properties of the Hilbert space-filling curve. Knowledge and Data Engineering, IEEE Transactions on 13, 124-141 (2001).

10.      Kurc, T., Çatalyürek, Ü., Chang, C., Sussman, A. & Saltz, J. Visualization of large data sets with the active data repository. Computer Graphics and Applications, IEEE 21, 24-33 (2001).

11.      Beynon, M. D. et al. Distributed processing of very large datasets with DataCutter. Parallel computing 27, 1457-1478 (2001).

12.      Saltz, J. H., Mirchandaney, R. & Crowley, K. Run-time parallelization and scheduling of loops. Computers, IEEE Transactions on 40, 603-612 (1991).

Publications

Scholar  |   NCBI   |   DBLP  |   PubMed

Awards
Dr. Saltz is a fellow of the American College of Medical Informatics, Cherith Chair of Biomedical Informatics, leads the newly founded Center for Engineering Driven Medicine (IEDM) and co-leads the Imaging, Bioinformatics and Engineering Science (IBES) Cancer Center program. He has participated in over 70 grants and contracts, serving as principal investigator on roughly half of those, and has an extensive publication track record with over 18,000 citations.
Teaching Summary
Stony Brook Medicine: CS 595 Topics in Computer Science: Data Analytics Software - Stacks At Emory, Georgia Tech, Ohio State and U Maryland: Graduate seminars in Data Analytics, Graduate seminars in High Performance Computing