UWB microwave imaging for breast cancer detection: Many-core, GPU, or FPGA?

ACM Trans. Embedded Comput. Syst.(2014)

Cited 11|Views6
No score
Abstract
An UWB microwave imaging system for breast cancer detection consists of antennas, transceivers, and a high-performance embedded system for elaborating the received signals and reconstructing breast images. In this article we focus on this embedded system. To accelerate the image reconstruction, the Beamforming phase has to be implemented in a parallel fashion. We assess its implementation in three currently available high-end platforms based on a multicore CPU, a GPU, and an FPGA, respectively. We then project the results applying technology scaling rules to future many-core CPUs, many-thread GPUs, and advanced FPGAs. We consider an optimistic case in which available resources increase according to Moore's law only, and a pessimistic case in which only a fraction of those resources are available due to a limited power budget. In both scenarios, an implementation that includes a high-end FPGA outperforms the other alternatives. Since the number of effectively usable cores in future many-cores will be power-limited, and there is a trend toward the integration of power-efficient accelerators, we conjecture that a chip consisting of a many-core section and a reconfigurable logic section will be the perfect platform for this application.
More
Translated text
Key words
uwb microwave imaging system,available resource,high-end fpga,breast image,available high-end platform,future many-core cpus,embedded system,high-performance embedded system,breast cancer detection,future many-cores,ultra wideband,fpga
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined