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  4. An Ultra-Low-Power Application-Specific Processor with Sub-VT Memories for Compressed Sensing
 
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An Ultra-Low-Power Application-Specific Processor with Sub-VT Memories for Compressed Sensing

Constantin, Jeremy Hugues-Felix  
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Dogan, Ahmed  
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Andersson, Oskar  
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Burg, Andreas Peter  
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Coskun, A.
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2013
VLSI-SoC: From Algorithms to Circuits and System-on-Chip Design

Compressed sensing (CS) is a universal low-complexity data compression technique for signals that have a sparse representation in some domain. While CS data compression can be done both in the analog- and digital domain, digital implementations are often used on low-power sensor nodes, where an ultra-low-power (ULP) processor carries out the algorithm on Nyquist-rate sampled data. In such systems an energy-efficient implementation of the CS compression kernel is a vital ingredient to maximize battery lifetime. In this paper, we propose an application-specific instruction-set processor (ASIP) processor that has been optimized for CS data compression and for operation in the subthreshold (sub-VT) regime. The design is equipped with specific sub-VT capable standard-cell based memories, to enable low-voltage operation with low leakage. Our results show that the proposed ASIP accomplishes 62× speed-up and 11.6× power savings with respect to a straightforward CS implementation running on the baseline low-power processor without instruction set extensions.

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