Adaptive and Polymorphic Computer Architectures
KEC 1003
Monday, November 24, 2014 - 4:00pm to 4:50pm

Michel Kinsy
Assistant Professor
Department of Computer and Information
University of Oregon

Abstract:
The current design approach in multicore or many-core computer systems presents 
application programmers with a great deal of challenges due to their 
ever-increasing complexity. Unlike frequency-scaling where performance is 
increased equally across the board, core-scaling pushes the burden of 
harnessing this additional processing power on the application or software 
programmer. To make optimal use of the system components, programmers must 
first learn about system parameters and how to best leverage them for a given 
application.

This approach requires time, effort, and often leads to suboptimal application 
performance in term of execution time or power. As a solution to this problem, 
we propose the Helios Multicore System (HMS), an adaptive computer architecture 
framework that applies machine learning algorithms and control theory 
techniques to the application execution by reasoning about the system runtime 
performance trade-offs. It has heterogeneous reconfigurable cores with fast 
hardware-level migration capability, self-organizing memory structures and 
hierarchies, an adaptive and quality-of-service aware network-on-chip, and a 
built-in hardware layer for dynamic, autonomous resource management.

Biography:
Michel A. Kinsy is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Computer and 
Information at the University of Oregon and director of the Computer 
Architecture and Embedded Systems (CAES) Laboratory. He received his Ph.D. in 
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from the Massachusetts Institute of 
Technology (MIT) in 2013. His doctoral work is one of the first to develop 
algorithms and hardware techniques to emulate and control large-scale power 
systems at the microsecond resolution. Part of this work is currently being 
further developed and commercialized through an MIT spin-off. Prior to joining 
the University of Oregon, Dr. Kinsy was a Technical Staff at the MIT Lincoln 
Laboratory working on advanced computer architecture concepts. Dr. Kinsy is an 
MIT Presidential Fellow and holds an M.S. in Electrical Engineering and 
Computer Science from MIT, a B.S.E. in Computer Systems Engineering and a B.S. 
in Computer Science from Arizona State University.

Prof. Michel Kinsy's research interests lie in the general area of computer 
system design with particular emphasis on self-aware, adaptive, 
high-performance many-core architectures, computer hardware security, very 
large scale integration (VLSI) systems design, intelligent network-on-chip 
(NoC), cyber-physical systems (CPS), reconfigurable hardware systems, 
large-scale distributed systems, and hard real-time embedded systems. He is 
particularly interested in the application of machine learning techniques to 
hardware execution.


--
_______________________________________________
Colloquium mailing list
[email protected]
https://secure.engr.oregonstate.edu/mailman/listinfo/colloquium

Reply via email to