784 research outputs found

    An overview of decision table literature 1982-1995.

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    This report gives an overview of the literature on decision tables over the past 15 years. As much as possible, for each reference, an author supplied abstract, a number of keywords and a classification are provided. In some cases own comments are added. The purpose of these comments is to show where, how and why decision tables are used. The literature is classified according to application area, theoretical versus practical character, year of publication, country or origin (not necessarily country of publication) and the language of the document. After a description of the scope of the interview, classification results and the classification by topic are presented. The main body of the paper is the ordered list of publications with abstract, classification and comments.

    HOP: a process model for synchronous hardware systems

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    technical reportModules in HOP are black-boxes that are understood and used only in terms of their interface. The interface consists of d a t a ports, events, and a protocol specification that uses events and asserts/queries values to / from ports. Events are realized as different combinations of control wires or as predicates defined over data conduits. Module await either command events or status events. Data conduits are realized as bus structures that deliver the same data items at the receiving end as items sent at t h e sending end (i.e. the busses do not have any wire-permutations, tappings, etc.). HOP is useful for writing both requirements (a priori) specifications and design (a posteriori) specifications. The manner in which requirements are expressed has usually no bearing on the actual implementation chosen later. Design specifications capture known facts about a system that has been built or has been designed in detail. In a HOP based design methodology, design proceeds hierarchically, and on many occasions (but not always) top-down. For most large systems, t h e requirements specification consists of the specification of a collection of modules and not one module; for these systems, the single module view is only derived a posteriori

    Synthesis, structure and power of systolic computations

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    AbstractA variety of problems related to systolic architectures, systems, models and computations are discussed. The emphases are on theoretical problems of a broader interest. Main motivations and interesting/important applications are also presented. The first part is devoted to problems related to synthesis, transformations and simulations of systolic systems and architectures. In the second part, the power and structure of tree and linear array computations are studied in detail. The goal is to survey main research directions, problems, methods and techniques in not too formal a way

    Formal process for systolic array design using recurrences

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    Custom Integrated Circuits

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    Contains reports on ten research projects.Analog Devices, Inc.IBM CorporationNational Science Foundation/Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Grant MIP 88-14612Analog Devices Career Development Assistant ProfessorshipU.S. Navy - Office of Naval Research Contract N0014-87-K-0825AT&TDigital Equipment CorporationNational Science Foundation Grant MIP 88-5876

    Energy-efficient acceleration of MPEG-4 compression tools

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    We propose novel hardware accelerator architectures for the most computationally demanding algorithms of the MPEG-4 video compression standard-motion estimation, binary motion estimation (for shape coding), and the forward/inverse discrete cosine transforms (incorporating shape adaptive modes). These accelerators have been designed using general low-energy design philosophies at the algorithmic/architectural abstraction levels. The themes of these philosophies are avoiding waste and trading area/performance for power and energy gains. Each core has been synthesised targeting TSMC 0.09 μm TCBN90LP technology, and the experimental results presented in this paper show that the proposed cores improve upon the prior art

    Micropipeline controller design and verification with applications in signal processing

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    The enabling model : a tool for performance analysis of concurrent mechanisms

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    Techniques for designing efficient parallel programs

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    The 1992 4th NASA SERC Symposium on VLSI Design

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    Papers from the fourth annual NASA Symposium on VLSI Design, co-sponsored by the IEEE, are presented. Each year this symposium is organized by the NASA Space Engineering Research Center (SERC) at the University of Idaho and is held in conjunction with a quarterly meeting of the NASA Data System Technology Working Group (DSTWG). One task of the DSTWG is to develop new electronic technologies that will meet next generation electronic data system needs. The symposium provides insights into developments in VLSI and digital systems which can be used to increase data systems performance. The NASA SERC is proud to offer, at its fourth symposium on VLSI design, presentations by an outstanding set of individuals from national laboratories, the electronics industry, and universities. These speakers share insights into next generation advances that will serve as a basis for future VLSI design
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