Overview
- Editors:
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Magdy A. Bayoumi
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The University of Southwestern Louisiana, USA
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Table of contents (10 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-xiii
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- M. Sarrafzadeh, A. K. Katsaggelos, S. P. R. Kumar
Pages 1-31
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- Zicheng Guo, Rami G. Melhem
Pages 33-47
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- George B. Adams III, Edward C. Bronson, Thomas L. Casavant, Leah H. Jamieson, Ray A. Kamin III
Pages 49-75
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- K. J. R. Liu, S. F. Hsieh
Pages 77-112
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- Wen-Tai Lin, Chung-Yih Ho, Chi-Yuan Chin
Pages 113-127
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- Björn Lisper, Sanjay Rajopadhye
Pages 129-158
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- Edward Ashford Lee, Jeffrey C. Bier
Pages 159-190
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- Soheil Shams, K. Wojtek Przytula
Pages 225-253
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- Manavendra Misra, V. K. Prasanna Kumar
Pages 255-279
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Back Matter
Pages 281-283
About this book
Over the past few years, the demand for high speed Digital Signal Proces sing (DSP) has increased dramatically. New applications in real-time image processing, satellite communications, radar signal processing, pattern recogni tion, and real-time signal detection and estimation require major improvements at several levels; algorithmic, architectural, and implementation. These perfor mance requirements can be achieved by employing parallel processing at all levels. Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) technology supports and provides a good avenue for parallelism. Parallelism offers efficient sohitions to several problems which can arise in VLSI DSP architectures such as: 1. Intermediate data communication and routing: several DSP algorithms, such as FFT, involve excessive data routing and reordering. Parallelism is an efficient mechanism to minimize the silicon cost and speed up the pro cessing time of the intermediate middle stages. 2. Complex DSP applications: the required computation is almost doubled. Parallelism will allow two similar channels processing at the same time. The communication between the two channels has to be minimized. 3. Applicatilm specific systems: this emerging approach should achieve real-time performance in a cost-effective way. 4. Testability and fault tolerance: reliability has become a required feature in most of DSP systems. To achieve such property, the involved time overhead is significant. Parallelism may be the solution to maintain ac ceptable speed performance.
Editors and Affiliations
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The University of Southwestern Louisiana, USA
Magdy A. Bayoumi