High-level Modeling of Switching Activity with Application to Low-power DSP System Synthesis
Paper in proceeding, 1999

We address the issue of high-level synthesis of tow-power digital signal processing (DSP) systems by proposing switching activity models. In particular, we present a technology independent hierarchical scheme to compare relative power performance of two competing DSP systems. The basic building blocks considered for such system are a full-adder and a one-bit delay. Estimates of switching activity at the output of these building blocks is used to model the activity in different architectural primitives used for building DSP systems. This method is very fast and simple and simulations show accuracy within 4% of extensive bit-level simulations. Therefore, it can easily be integrated into current communications/DSP CAD tools for low-power applications. The models show that the choice of multiplier/multiplicand is important when using array multipliers in a data-path. If the input signal with smaller variance is chosen as the as the multiplicand, up to 20% savings in switching activity can be achieved. This observation is verified by analog simulation.

Author

Magnus Lundberg

Chalmers, Signals and Systems, Signal Processing and Biomedical Engineering

Khurram Muhammad

Kaushik Roy

S.K. Wilson

Proc. 1999 International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing (ICASSP'99), Phoenix, AZ, USA

1877-1880

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Computer and Information Science

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Created

10/8/2017