Title :
Low-power processor architecture exploration for online biomedical signal analysis
Author :
Dogan, A.Y. ; Constantin, J. ; Atienza, David ; Burg, Andreas ; Benini, Luca
Author_Institution :
Embedded Syst. Lab. (ESL), EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract :
In this study, the authors explore sequential and parallel processing architectures, utilising a custom ultra-low-power (ULP) processing core, to extend the lifetime of health monitoring systems, where slow biosignal events and highly parallel computations exist. To this end, a single-and a multi-core architecture are proposed and compared. The single-core architecture is composed of one ULP processing core, an instruction memory (IM) and a data memory (DM), while the multi-core architecture consists of several ULP processing cores, individual IMs for each core, a shared DM and an interconnection crossbar between the cores and the DM. These architectures are compared with respect to power/performance trade-offs for different target workloads of online biomedical signal analysis, while exploiting near threshold computing. The results show that with respect to the single-core architecture, the multi-core solution consumes 62% less power for high computation requirements (167 MOps/s), while consuming 46% more power for extremely low computation needs when the power consumption is dominated by leakage. Additionally, the authors show that the proposed ULP processing core, using a simplified instruction set architecture (ISA), achieves energy savings of 54% compared to a reference microcontroller ISA (PIC24).
Keywords :
biomedical electronics; instruction sets; low-power electronics; medical signal processing; microcontrollers; parallel architectures; parallel processing; patient monitoring; ISA; ULP processing core; data memory; energy savings; health monitoring systems; instruction memory; interconnection crossbar; low-power processor architecture exploration; multicore architecture; near threshold computing; online biomedical signal analysis; parallel processing architectures; power consumption; reference microcontroller ISA; simplified instruction set architecture; single-core architecture; slow biosignal events; ultralow power processing core;
Journal_Title :
Circuits, Devices & Systems, IET
DOI :
10.1049/iet-cds.2012.0011