Matching Items (4)
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- All Subjects: Electrical Engineering
- All Subjects: GPGPU
Description
Parents in STEM careers are more apt to guide their kids towards STEM careers (Sherburne-Michigan, 2017). There are STEM programs and classes for students who are interested in related fields, but the conundrum is that students need to be interested in order to choose to participate. The goal of this creative project was to introduce engineering concepts in a high school class to reveal and investigate the ways in which engineering concepts can be successfully introduced to a larger student populace to increase interest in engineering programs, courses, and degrees. A lesson plan and corresponding materials - including circuit kits and a simulated ball launching station with graphical display - were made to accomplish this goal. Throughout the lesson students were asked to (1) use given materials to accomplish a goal, (2) predict outcomes based on conceptual understanding and mathematical calculations, (3) test predictions, (4) record data, and (5) analyze data to generate results. The students first created a simple circuit to understand the circuit components and learn general electrical engineering concepts. A simple light dimmer circuit let students demonstrate understanding of electrical concepts (e.g., voltage, current resistance) before using the circuit to a simulated motor in order to launch a ball. The students were then asked to predict the time and height of a ball launched with various settings of their control circuit. The students were able to test their theories with the simulated launcher test set up shown in Figure 25 and collect data to create a parabolic height versus time graph. Based on the measured graph, the students were able to record their results and compare calculated values to real-world measured values. The results of the study suggest ways to introduce students to engineering while developing hands-on concept modeling of projectile motion and circuit design in math classrooms. Additionally, this lesson identifies a rich topic for teachers and STEM education researchers to explore lesson plans with interdisciplinary connections to engineering. This report will include the inspiration for the product, related work, iterative design process, and the final design. This information will be followed by user feedback, a project reflection, and lessons learned. The report will conclude with a summary and a discussion of future work.
ContributorsBurgess, Kylee Rae (Author) / Jordan, Shawn (Thesis director) / Sohoni, Sohum (Committee member) / Kinach, Barbara (Committee member) / Engineering Programs (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2018-05
Description
The technological advances in the past few decades have made possible creation and consumption of digital visual content at an explosive rate. Consequently, there is a need for efficient quality monitoring systems to ensure minimal degradation of images and videos during various processing operations like compression, transmission, storage etc. Objective Image Quality Assessment (IQA) algorithms have been developed that predict quality scores which match well with human subjective quality assessment. However, a lot of research still remains to be done before IQA algorithms can be deployed in real world systems. Long runtimes for one frame of image is a major hurdle. Graphics Processing Units (GPUs), equipped with massive number of computational cores, provide an opportunity to accelerate IQA algorithms by performing computations in parallel. Indeed, General Purpose Graphics Processing Units (GPGPU) techniques have been applied to a few Full Reference IQA algorithms which fall under the. We present a GPGPU implementation of Blind Image Integrity Notator using DCT Statistics (BLIINDS-II), which falls under the No Reference IQA algorithm paradigm. We have been able to achieve a speedup of over 30x over the previous CPU version of this algorithm. We test our implementation using various distorted images from the CSIQ database and present the performance trends observed. We achieve a very consistent performance of around 9 milliseconds per distorted image, which made possible the execution of over 100 images per second (100 fps).
ContributorsYadav, Aman (Author) / Sohoni, Sohum (Thesis advisor) / Aukes, Daniel (Committee member) / Redkar, Sangram (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
Description
With the advent of GPGPU, many applications are being accelerated by using CUDA programing paradigm. We are able to achieve around 10x -100x speedups by simply porting the application on to the GPU and running the parallel chunk of code on its multi cored SIMT (Single instruction multiple thread) architecture. But for optimal performance it is necessary to make sure that all the GPU resources are efficiently used, and the latencies in the application are minimized. For this, it is essential to monitor the Hardware usage of the algorithm and thus diagnose the compute and memory bottlenecks in the implementation. In the following thesis, we will be analyzing the mapping of CUDA implementation of BLIINDS-II algorithm on the underlying GPU hardware, and come up with a Kepler architecture specific solution of using shuffle instruction via CUB library to tackle the two major bottlenecks in the algorithm. Experiments were conducted to convey the advantage of using shuffle instru3ction in algorithm over only using shared memory as a buffer to global memory. With the new implementation of BLIINDS-II algorithm using CUB library, a speedup of around 13.7% was achieved.
ContributorsWadekar, Ameya (Author) / Sohoni, Sohum (Thesis advisor) / Aukes, Daniel (Committee member) / Redkar, Sangram (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
Description
The information era has brought about many technological advancements in the past
few decades, and that has led to an exponential increase in the creation of digital images and
videos. Constantly, all digital images go through some image processing algorithm for
various reasons like compression, transmission, storage, etc. There is data loss during this
process which leaves us with a degraded image. Hence, to ensure minimal degradation of
images, the requirement for quality assessment has become mandatory. Image Quality
Assessment (IQA) has been researched and developed over the last several decades to
predict the quality score in a manner that agrees with human judgments of quality. Modern
image quality assessment (IQA) algorithms are quite effective at prediction accuracy, and
their development has not focused on improving computational performance. The existing
serial implementation requires a relatively large run-time on the order of seconds for a single
frame. Hardware acceleration using Field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) provides
reconfigurable computing fabric that can be tailored for a broad range of applications.
Usually, programming FPGAs has required expertise in hardware descriptive languages
(HDLs) or high-level synthesis (HLS) tool. OpenCL is an open standard for cross-platform,
parallel programming of heterogeneous systems along with Altera OpenCL SDK, enabling
developers to use FPGA's potential without extensive hardware knowledge. Hence, this
thesis focuses on accelerating the computationally intensive part of the most apparent
distortion (MAD) algorithm on FPGA using OpenCL. The results are compared with CPU
implementation to evaluate performance and efficiency gains.
few decades, and that has led to an exponential increase in the creation of digital images and
videos. Constantly, all digital images go through some image processing algorithm for
various reasons like compression, transmission, storage, etc. There is data loss during this
process which leaves us with a degraded image. Hence, to ensure minimal degradation of
images, the requirement for quality assessment has become mandatory. Image Quality
Assessment (IQA) has been researched and developed over the last several decades to
predict the quality score in a manner that agrees with human judgments of quality. Modern
image quality assessment (IQA) algorithms are quite effective at prediction accuracy, and
their development has not focused on improving computational performance. The existing
serial implementation requires a relatively large run-time on the order of seconds for a single
frame. Hardware acceleration using Field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) provides
reconfigurable computing fabric that can be tailored for a broad range of applications.
Usually, programming FPGAs has required expertise in hardware descriptive languages
(HDLs) or high-level synthesis (HLS) tool. OpenCL is an open standard for cross-platform,
parallel programming of heterogeneous systems along with Altera OpenCL SDK, enabling
developers to use FPGA's potential without extensive hardware knowledge. Hence, this
thesis focuses on accelerating the computationally intensive part of the most apparent
distortion (MAD) algorithm on FPGA using OpenCL. The results are compared with CPU
implementation to evaluate performance and efficiency gains.
ContributorsGunavelu Mohan, Aswin (Author) / Sohoni, Sohum (Thesis advisor) / Ren, Fengbo (Thesis advisor) / Seo, Jae-Sun (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017