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dc.contributor.authorLeiserson, Charles E.en_US
dc.contributor.authorSaxe, James B.en_US
dc.date.accessioned2023-03-29T14:20:37Z
dc.date.available2023-03-29T14:20:37Z
dc.date.issued1982-03
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/149025
dc.description.abstractThe complexity of integrated-circuit chips produced today makes it feasible to build inexpensive, special-purpose subsystems that rapidly solve sophisticated problems on behalf of a general-purpose host computer. This paper contributes to the design methodology of efficient VLSI algorithms. We present a transformation that converts synchronous systems into more time-efficient, systolic implementations by removing combinatorial rippling. The problem of determining the optimized system can be reduced to the graph-theoretic single-destination-shortest-paths problem. More importantly from an engineering standpoint, however, the kinds of rippling that can be removed from a circuit at essentially no cost can be easily characterized. For example, if the only global communication in a system is broadcasting from the host computer, the broadcast can always be replaced by local communication.en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesMIT-LCS-TM-215
dc.titleOptimizing Synchronous Systemsen_US
dc.identifier.oclc9825255


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