Discover grid computing-how to successfully build, implement, and manage widely distributed computing architectureWith technology budgets under increasing scrutiny and system architecture becoming more and more complex, many organizations are rethinking how they manage and use technology. Keeping a
Computer Architectures for Spatially Distributed Data
β Scribed by Per-Erik Danielsson (auth.), Herbert Freeman, Goffredo G. Pieroni (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1985
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 390
- Series
- NATO ASI Series 18
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
These are the proceedings of a NATO Advanced Study Institute (ASI) held in Cetraro, Italy during 6-17 June 1983. The title of the ASI was Computer Arehiteetures for SpatiaZZy vistributed Vata, and it brouqht together some 60 participants from Europe and America. Presented ~ere are 21 of the lectures that were delivered. The articles cover a wide spectrum of topics related to computer architecture s specially oriented toward the fast processing of spatial data, and represent an excellent review of the state-of-the-art of this topic. For more than 20 years now researchers in pattern recognition, image processing, meteorology, remote sensing, and computer engineering have been looking toward new forms of computer architectures to speed the processing of data from two- and three-dimensional processes. The work can be said to have commenced with the landmark article by Steve Unger in 1958, and it received a strong forward push with the development of the ILIAC III and IV computers at the University of Illinois during the 1960's. One clear obstacle faced by the computer designers in those days was the limitation of the state-of-the-art of hardware, when the only switching devices available to them were discrete transistors. As aresult parallel processing was generally considered to be impraeΒ tieal, and relatively little progress was made.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-VIII
Algorithm-Driven Architecture for Parallel Image Processing....Pages 1-17
Architectures of SIMD Cellular Logic Image Processing Arrays....Pages 19-36
Classification Schemes for Image Processing Architectures....Pages 37-55
Representations of Spatially Parallel Architectures....Pages 57-74
Computer Architecture for Interactive Display of Segmented Imagery....Pages 75-94
The PASM System and Parallel Image Processing....Pages 95-119
The Conversion Via Software of a SIMD Processor into a MIMD Processor....Pages 121-137
VLSI Multiprocessor for Image Processing....Pages 139-157
One, Two,β¦ Many Processors for Image Processing....Pages 159-185
Microcomputer and Software Architecture for Processing Sequences of Maps: Association of Successive Frames....Pages 187-201
Disparity Based Scene Analysis....Pages 203-221
Pyramid Architectures for Image Analysis....Pages 223-228
Using Quadtrees to Represent Spatial Data....Pages 229-247
Octrees: A Data Structure for Solid-Object Modeling....Pages 249-259
Efficient Storage of Quadtrees and Octrees....Pages 261-278
Image Processing with Hierarchical Cellular Logic....Pages 279-294
Considerations on Pyramidal Pipelines for Spatial Analysis of Geoscience Map Data....Pages 295-311
An Interpolation Method on Triangular Networks for Surface Model Architectures....Pages 313-328
Introduction to a Simple But Unconventional Multiprocessor System and Outline of an Application....Pages 329-348
Parallel Processing....Pages 349-374
Parallel Algorithms for Hypotheses Generation in Continuous Speech....Pages 375-391
Back Matter....Pages 393-393
β¦ Subjects
Processor Architectures; Memory Structures; Input/Output and Data Communications; Logic Design
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Discover grid computing-how to successfully build, implement, and manage widely distributed computing architectureWith technology budgets under increasing scrutiny and system architecture becoming more and more complex, many organizations are rethinking how they manage and use technology. Keeping a
<p>Delta-4 is a 5-nation, 13-partner project that has been investigating the achievement of dependability in open distributed systems, including real-time systems. This book describes the design and validation of the distributed fault-tolerant architecture developed within this project. The key feat
Preliminary materials of most chapter were presented at the 1977-1979 National Computer Conferences.