On-Line
Management of Embedded Systems and Integrated Circuits
Professor Robert Dick
Department of EECS
University of Michigan
Abstract
This talk has the goal of indicating
potentially promising sensing and computer system design and synthesis problems
for control researchers. It will
introduce ongoing projects on a number of embedded system and integrated
circuit design and management problems for which control plays an important
role.
The talk will address the following
questions related to sensing systems.
How can the design of correct wireless sensing applications be made
accessible to those who most need these systems, instead of merely to embedded
systems programming experts? What
control algorithms are necessary to permit adaptation to discrete component
faults, varying communication performance, and changing data properties?
High power consumption and temperature now
limit the performance of computing systems. Proactive control techniques can increase performance, given
a constraint on peak temperature.
We will describe prior work on dynamic power-thermal management of
multi-core processors and indicate unsolved problems in system analysis. In addition, we will sketch a framework
for viewing the global data center management problem from a control
perspective.
Bio: Robert Dick is an Associate Professor of
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the University of Michigan. He received his Ph.D. degree from Princeton
University and his Bachelor's degree from Clarkson University. He worked as an Associate Professor at
Northwestern University, a Visiting Professor at Tsinghua University, and a
Visiting Researcher at NEC Labs America.
Robert received an NSF CAREER award and won his department's Best
Teacher of the Year award in 2004.
His technology won a Computerworld Horizon Award and his paper was
selected by DATE as one of the 30 most influential in the past 10 years in
2007. He served as a technical
program subcommittee chair for the International Conference on Hardware/Software
Codesign and System Synthesis. He
is an Associate Editor of IEEE Transactions on VLSI Systems and serves on the
technical program committees of several embedded systems and CAD/VLSI
conferences.
Friday, March 20, 2009
3:30 – 4:30p.m
Rm. 1500 EECS