<p><em>Applied Soft Computing: Techniques and Applications</em> explores a variety of modern techniques that deal with estimated models and give resolutions to complex real-life issues. Involving the concepts and practices of soft computing in conjunction with other frontier research domains, this b
Stochastic Computing: Techniques and Applications
β Scribed by Warren J. Gross, Vincent C. Gaudet
- Publisher
- Springer International Publishing
- Year
- 2019
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 224
- Edition
- 1st ed.
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book covers the history and recent developments of stochastic computing. Stochastic computing (SC) was first introduced in the 1960s for logic circuit design, but its origin can be traced back to von Neumann's work on probabilistic logic. In SC, real numbers are encoded by random binary bit streams, and information is carried on the statistics of the binary streams. SC offers advantages such as hardware simplicity and fault tolerance. Its promise in data processing has been shown in applications including neural computation, decoding of error-correcting codes, image processing, spectral transforms and reliability analysis.
There are three main parts to this book. The first part, comprising Chapters 1 and 2, provides a history of the technical developments in stochastic computing and a tutorial overview of the field for both novice and seasoned stochastic computing researchers. In the second part, comprising Chapters 3 to 8, we review both well-established and emerging design approaches for stochastic computing systems, with a focus on accuracy, correlation, sequence generation, and synthesis. The last part, comprising Chapters 9 and 10, provides insights into applications in machine learning and error-control coding.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter ....Pages i-xvi
Introduction to Stochastic Computing (Vincent C. Gaudet, Warren J. Gross, Kenneth C. Smith)....Pages 1-11
Origins of Stochastic Computing (Brian R. Gaines)....Pages 13-37
Tutorial on Stochastic Computing (Chris Winstead)....Pages 39-76
Accuracy and Correlation in Stochastic Computing (Armin Alaghi, Paishun Ting, Vincent T. Lee, John P. Hayes)....Pages 77-102
Synthesis of Polynomial Functions (Marc Riedel, Weikang Qian)....Pages 103-120
Deterministic Approaches to Bitstream Computing (Marc Riedel)....Pages 121-136
Generating Stochastic Bitstreams (Hsuan Hsiao, Jason Anderson, Yuko Hara-Azumi)....Pages 137-152
RRAM Solutions for Stochastic Computing (Phil Knag, Siddharth Gaba, Wei Lu, Zhengya Zhang)....Pages 153-164
Spintronic Solutions for Stochastic Computing (Xiaotao Jia, You Wang, Zhe Huang, Yue Zhang, Jianlei Yang, Yuanzhuo Qu et al.)....Pages 165-183
Brain-Inspired Computing (Naoya Onizawa, Warren J. Gross, Takahiro Hanyu)....Pages 185-199
Stochastic Decoding of Error-Correcting Codes (FranΓ§ois Leduc-Primeau, Saied Hemati, Vincent C. Gaudet, Warren J. Gross)....Pages 201-215
β¦ Subjects
Engineering; Circuits and Systems; Logic Design; Probability Theory and Stochastic Processes
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>In order to obtain more reliable optimal solutions of concrete technical/economic problems, e.g. optimal design problems, the often known stochastic variations of many technical/economic parameters have to be taken into account already in the planning phase. Hence, ordinary mathematical programs
<p>This volume contains the written versions of lectures held at the "23. Internationale Universit~tswochen fUr Kernphysik" in Schladming, Austria, in February 1984. Once again the generous support of our sponsors, the Austrian Ministry of Science and Research, the Styrian Government and others, had
<p>About four or five years ago one began to hear about the enormous interest being taken in on-line consoles and displays. Nothing much was done with them, but computer men felt that this was the way computing ought to go: one might dispense with cards, and overcome many of the problems of man-mach
<span>About four or five years ago one began to hear about the enormous interest being taken in on-line consoles and displays. Nothing much was done with them, but computer men felt that this was the way computing ought to go: one might dispense with cards, and overcome many of the problems of man-m