7 research outputs found

    Low-Power and Error-Resilient VLSI Circuits and Systems.

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    Efficient low-power operation is critically important for the success of the next-generation signal processing applications. Device and supply voltage have been continuously scaled to meet a more constrained power envelope, but scaling has created resiliency challenges, including increasing timing faults and soft errors. Our research aims at designing low-power and robust circuits and systems for signal processing by drawing circuit, architecture, and algorithm approaches. To gain an insight into the system faults due to supply voltage reduction, we researched the two primary effects that determine the minimum supply voltage (VMIN) in Intel’s tri-gate CMOS technology, namely process variations and gate-dielectric soft breakdown. We determined that voltage scaling increases the timing window that sequential circuits are vulnerable. Thus, we proposed a new hold-time violation metric to define hold-time VMIN, which has been adopted as a new design standard. Device scaling increases soft errors which affect circuit reliability. Through extensive soft error characterization using two 65nm CMOS test chips, we studied the soft error mechanisms and its dependence on supply voltage and clock frequency. This study laid the foundation of the first 65nm DSP chip design for a NASA spaceflight project. To mitigate such random errors, we proposed a new confidence-driven architecture that effectively enhances the error resiliency of deeply scaled CMOS and post-CMOS circuits. Designing low-power resilient systems can effectively leverage application-specific algorithmic approaches. To explore design opportunities in the algorithmic domain, we demonstrate an application-specific detection and decoding processor for multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) wireless communication. To enhance the receive error rate for a robust wireless communication, we designed a joint detection and decoding technique by enclosing detection and decoding in an iterative loop to enhance both interference cancellation and error reduction. A proof-of-concept chip design was fabricated for the next-generation 4x4 256QAM MIMO systems. Through algorithm-architecture optimizations and low-power circuit techniques, our design achieves significant improvements in throughput, energy efficiency and error rate, paving the way for future developments in this area.PhDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110323/1/uchchen_1.pd

    Video Processing Acceleration using Reconfigurable Logic and Graphics Processors

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    A vexing question is `which architecture will prevail as the core feature of the next state of the art video processing system?' This thesis examines the substitutive and collaborative use of the two alternatives of the reconfigurable logic and graphics processor architectures. A structured approach to executing architecture comparison is presented - this includes a proposed `Three Axes of Algorithm Characterisation' scheme and a formulation of perfor- mance drivers. The approach is an appealing platform for clearly defining the problem, assumptions and results of a comparison. In this work it is used to resolve the advanta- geous factors of the graphics processor and reconfigurable logic for video processing, and the conditions determining which one is superior. The comparison results prompt the exploration of the customisable options for the graphics processor architecture. To clearly define the architectural design space, the graphics processor is first identifed as part of a wider scope of homogeneous multi-processing element (HoMPE) architectures. A novel exploration tool is described which is suited to the investigation of the customisable op- tions of HoMPE architectures. The tool adopts a systematic exploration approach and a high-level parameterisable system model, and is used to explore pre- and post-fabrication customisable options for the graphics processor. A positive result of the exploration is the proposal of a reconfigurable engine for data access (REDA) to optimise graphics processor performance for video processing-specific memory access patterns. REDA demonstrates the viability of the use of reconfigurable logic as collaborative `glue logic' in the graphics processor architecture

    Speech Recognition

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    Chapters in the first part of the book cover all the essential speech processing techniques for building robust, automatic speech recognition systems: the representation for speech signals and the methods for speech-features extraction, acoustic and language modeling, efficient algorithms for searching the hypothesis space, and multimodal approaches to speech recognition. The last part of the book is devoted to other speech processing applications that can use the information from automatic speech recognition for speaker identification and tracking, for prosody modeling in emotion-detection systems and in other speech processing applications that are able to operate in real-world environments, like mobile communication services and smart homes

    GSI Scientific Report 2006 [GSI Report 2007-1]

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