12,503 research outputs found
Fault tolerant architectures for integrated aircraft electronics systems
Work into possible architectures for future flight control computer systems is described. Ada for Fault-Tolerant Systems, the NETS Network Error-Tolerant System architecture, and voting in asynchronous systems are covered
Experimental Bayesian Quantum Phase Estimation on a Silicon Photonic Chip
Quantum phase estimation is a fundamental subroutine in many quantum
algorithms, including Shor's factorization algorithm and quantum simulation.
However, so far results have cast doubt on its practicability for near-term,
non-fault tolerant, quantum devices. Here we report experimental results
demonstrating that this intuition need not be true. We implement a recently
proposed adaptive Bayesian approach to quantum phase estimation and use it to
simulate molecular energies on a Silicon quantum photonic device. The approach
is verified to be well suited for pre-threshold quantum processors by
investigating its superior robustness to noise and decoherence compared to the
iterative phase estimation algorithm. This shows a promising route to unlock
the power of quantum phase estimation much sooner than previously believed
Redundant Logic Insertion and Fault Tolerance Improvement in Combinational Circuits
This paper presents a novel method to identify and insert redundant logic
into a combinational circuit to improve its fault tolerance without having to
replicate the entire circuit as is the case with conventional redundancy
techniques. In this context, it is discussed how to estimate the fault masking
capability of a combinational circuit using the truth-cum-fault enumeration
table, and then it is shown how to identify the logic that can introduced to
add redundancy into the original circuit without affecting its native
functionality and with the aim of improving its fault tolerance though this
would involve some trade-off in the design metrics. However, care should be
taken while introducing redundant logic since redundant logic insertion may
give rise to new internal nodes and faults on those may impact the fault
tolerance of the resulting circuit. The combinational circuit that is
considered and its redundant counterparts are all implemented in semi-custom
design style using a 32/28nm CMOS digital cell library and their respective
design metrics and fault tolerances are compared
Whom to Ask? Jury Selection for Decision Making Tasks on Micro-blog Services
It is universal to see people obtain knowledge on micro-blog services by
asking others decision making questions. In this paper, we study the Jury
Selection Problem(JSP) by utilizing crowdsourcing for decision making tasks on
micro-blog services. Specifically, the problem is to enroll a subset of crowd
under a limited budget, whose aggregated wisdom via Majority Voting scheme has
the lowest probability of drawing a wrong answer(Jury Error Rate-JER). Due to
various individual error-rates of the crowd, the calculation of JER is
non-trivial. Firstly, we explicitly state that JER is the probability when the
number of wrong jurors is larger than half of the size of a jury. To avoid the
exponentially increasing calculation of JER, we propose two efficient
algorithms and an effective bounding technique. Furthermore, we study the Jury
Selection Problem on two crowdsourcing models, one is for altruistic
users(AltrM) and the other is for incentive-requiring users(PayM) who require
extra payment when enrolled into a task. For the AltrM model, we prove the
monotonicity of JER on individual error rate and propose an efficient exact
algorithm for JSP. For the PayM model, we prove the NP-hardness of JSP on PayM
and propose an efficient greedy-based heuristic algorithm. Finally, we conduct
a series of experiments to investigate the traits of JSP, and validate the
efficiency and effectiveness of our proposed algorithms on both synthetic and
real micro-blog data.Comment: VLDB201
Study on advanced information processing system
Issues related to the reliability of a redundant system with large main memory are addressed. In particular, the Fault-Tolerant Processor (FTP) for Advanced Launch System (ALS) is used as a basis for our presentation. When the system is free of latent faults, the probability of system crash due to nearly-coincident channel faults is shown to be insignificant even when the outputs of computing channels are infrequently voted on. In particular, using channel error maskers (CEMs) is shown to improve reliability more effectively than increasing the number of channels for applications with long mission times. Even without using a voter, most memory errors can be immediately corrected by CEMs implemented with conventional coding techniques. In addition to their ability to enhance system reliability, CEMs--with a low hardware overhead--can be used to reduce not only the need of memory realignment, but also the time required to realign channel memories in case, albeit rare, such a need arises. Using CEMs, we have developed two schemes, called Scheme 1 and Scheme 2, to solve the memory realignment problem. In both schemes, most errors are corrected by CEMs, and the remaining errors are masked by a voter
Bandit-Based Task Assignment for Heterogeneous Crowdsourcing
We consider a task assignment problem in crowdsourcing, which is aimed at
collecting as many reliable labels as possible within a limited budget. A
challenge in this scenario is how to cope with the diversity of tasks and the
task-dependent reliability of workers, e.g., a worker may be good at
recognizing the name of sports teams, but not be familiar with cosmetics
brands. We refer to this practical setting as heterogeneous crowdsourcing. In
this paper, we propose a contextual bandit formulation for task assignment in
heterogeneous crowdsourcing, which is able to deal with the
exploration-exploitation trade-off in worker selection. We also theoretically
investigate the regret bounds for the proposed method, and demonstrate its
practical usefulness experimentally
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