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Integration
of Embedded Processors in Wireless Systems-On-A-Chip
Vandana Prabhu, 2001, M.S.
(advisor: Jan M. Rabaey)
The
advent of third generation of wireless applications creates a need for
digital signal processing platforms that simultaneously display high
computational performance, ultra-low energy consumption and a high degree
of flexibility and adaptability. The flexibility and adaptability is a
necessity in the presence of multiple and evolving standards, and helps to
increase quality-of-ser-vice in the presence of dynamically evolving
channel conditions. State-of-the-art programmable processors (embedded
RISC and DSPs) offer good flexibility but have very poor energy
effi-ciency(0.1 to 10 MOPS/mW) as compared to that of dedicated ASIC
implementations(100-1000MOPS/mW). (Re)configurable architectures like
Pleiades[1][2] attempt to bridge this gap in the flexibility-energy
efficiency curve by combining flexibility and low-energy across a target
set of applications in a specific domain (such as speech coding and CDMA).
MAIA is a prototype of a heterogeneous
reconfigurable DSP targeted for voice compression, achieving energy levels
between 50 and 100 MIPS/mW for wireless base band functions. On
another note, future wireless systems will provide reliable and mobile
connectivity while supporting a broad variety of multimedia services at
very low cost. Among next generation wireless systems, sensor networks are
of special interest.

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