Distinguished Lecture with Janak Patel

When

March 26, 2018    
1:10 pm - 2:00 pm

Where

3043 ECpE Building Addition
Coover Hall, Ames, Iowa, 50011

Event Type

Janak PatelSpeaker: Janak H. Patel, Donald Biggar Willett Professor Emeritus of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Title: Can We Save Energy if We Allow Errors in Computing?

Abstract: A brief overview of present understanding of tradeoff between Energy and Errors in Computing will be presented. Prevailing understanding of a chip’s behavior under large process variations with statistical delay assumptions leads one to conclude that a small number of errors are likely as we progress further down on Moore’s Law. This understanding is challenged by a new hypothesis on the behavior of large CMOS chips in the presence of process variations. A Thought Experiment is presented which leads to the new hypothesis. The new hypothesis states that in every large CMOS chip, there exist critical operations points (frequency, voltage) such that it divides the 2-D space (F, V) in to two distinct spaces: 1. Error-free operation and 2. Massive errors (i.e. completely inoperable). Two attempts at disproving this hypothesis with real physical experiments will be described. Some consequences of the hypothesis on energy savings in large data centers are also suggested.

Bio: Janak H. Patel is a Donald Biggar Wilett Professor Emeritus of Engineering and a Research Professor in Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Patel’s research contributions include Pipeline Scheduling, Cache Coherence, Cache Simulation, Cache Prefetching, Interconnection Networks, On-line Error Detection, Reliability analysis of memories with ECC and scrubbing, Design for Testability, Built-In Self-Test, Fault Simulation and Automatic Test Generation. Patel has supervised over 85 M.S. and Ph.D. theses and published over 200 technical papers. He was a founding technical advisor to Nexgen Microsystems that gave rise to the entire line of microprocessors from AMD. He was a founder of successful startup, Sunrise Test, a CAD company for chip testing, now owned by Synopsys. He received a Bachelor of Science (1967) degree in Physics from Gujarat University, India and Bachelor of Technology (1970) in Electrical Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, India, and a Master of Science and Ph.D. (1976) in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University. He is a Fellow of ACM (2001) and IEEE (1989) and a recipient of the 1998 IEEE Piore Award. He received Life Time Contribution Medal from the IEEE Test Technology Council in 2016.

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