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Stretching the Limit of Microarchitectural Level Leakage Control With Adaptive Light-Weight Vth Hopping
"... Power gating (PG) and body biasing (BB) are popular leakage control techniques at microarchitectural level. However, their large overhead prevents them from being applied for active leakage reduction. The overhead problem is further magnified by temperature and process variation, leading to the “cor ..."
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to the “corner case leakage control ” problem. This paper presents an Adaptive Light-Weight Vth Hopping technique. This technique dramatically reduces the overhead for mode transition, addresses the corner case leakage control problem, and thus enables active leakage control. 1.
1 Aggressive Runtime Leakage Control Through Adaptive Light-Weight Vth Hopping with Temperature and Process Variation
"... Abstract—The increasing leakage power consumption and stringent thermal constraint necessitate more aggressive leakage control techniques. Power gating and body biasing are widely used for standby leakage control. Their large energy overhead for performing mode transition is the major obstacle for m ..."
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for more aggressive leakage control. Temperature and process variation (TV/PV) further magnify the overhead problem, leading to socalled “corner case leakage control ” problem. Light-Weight Vth Hopping (LW-VH) is a candidate technique to tackle the energy overhead problem. This paper demonstrates
Cognitive Radio: Brain-Empowered Wireless Communications
, 2005
"... Cognitive radio is viewed as a novel approach for improving the utilization of a precious natural resource: the radio electromagnetic spectrum. The cognitive radio, built on a software-defined radio, is defined as an intelligent wireless communication system that is aware of its environment and use ..."
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Cited by 1479 (4 self)
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and uses the methodology of understanding-by-building to learn from the environment and adapt to statistical variations in the input stimuli, with two primary objectives in mind: • highly reliable communication whenever and wherever needed; • efficient utilization of the radio spectrum. Following
Wireless sensor networks: a survey
, 2002
"... This paper describes the concept of sensor networks which has been made viable by the convergence of microelectro-mechanical systems technology, wireless communications and digital electronics. First, the sensing tasks and the potential sensor networks applications are explored, and a review of fact ..."
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Cited by 1936 (23 self)
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This paper describes the concept of sensor networks which has been made viable by the convergence of microelectro-mechanical systems technology, wireless communications and digital electronics. First, the sensing tasks and the potential sensor networks applications are explored, and a review of factors influencing the design of sensor networks is provided. Then, the communication architecture for sensor networks is outlined, and the algorithms and protocols developed for each layer in the literature are explored. Open research issues for the realization of sensor networks are
Wireless Communications
, 2005
"... Copyright c ○ 2005 by Cambridge University Press. This material is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University ..."
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Cited by 1129 (32 self)
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Copyright c ○ 2005 by Cambridge University Press. This material is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University
The Landscape of Parallel Computing Research: A View from Berkeley
- TECHNICAL REPORT, UC BERKELEY
, 2006
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Handling Churn in a DHT
- In Proceedings of the USENIX Annual Technical Conference
, 2004
"... This paper addresses the problem of churn---the continuous process of node arrival and departure---in distributed hash tables (DHTs). We argue that DHTs should perform lookups quickly and consistently under churn rates at least as high as those observed in deployed P2P systems such as Kazaa. We then ..."
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Cited by 447 (24 self)
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This paper addresses the problem of churn---the continuous process of node arrival and departure---in distributed hash tables (DHTs). We argue that DHTs should perform lookups quickly and consistently under churn rates at least as high as those observed in deployed P2P systems such as Kazaa. We then show through experiments on an emulated network that current DHT implementations cannot handle such churn rates. Next, we identify and explore three factors affecting DHT performance under churn: reactive versus periodic failure recovery, message timeout calculation, and proximity neighbor selection. We work in the context of a mature DHT implementation called Bamboo, using the ModelNet network emulator, which models in-network queuing, cross-traffic, and packet loss. These factors are typically missing in earlier simulationbased DHT studies, and we show that careful attention to them in Bamboo's design allows it to function effectively at churn rates at or higher than that observed in P2P file-sharing applications, while using lower maintenance bandwidth than other DHT implementations.
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23,608