scispace - formally typeset
G

G. De Micheli

Researcher at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

Publications -  283
Citations -  23250

G. De Micheli is an academic researcher from École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. The author has contributed to research in topics: System on a chip & Network on a chip. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 257 publications receiving 22753 citations. Previous affiliations of G. De Micheli include École Normale Supérieure & University of Bologna.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Networks on chips: a new SoC paradigm

TL;DR: Focusing on using probabilistic metrics such as average values or variance to quantify design objectives such as performance and power will lead to a major change in SoC design methodologies.
Journal Article

A survey of design techniques for system-level dynamic power management : Special section on low-power electronics and design

TL;DR: Dynamic power management (DPM) is a design methodology for dynamically reconfiguring systems to provide the requested services and performance levels with a minimum number of active components or a minimum load on such components as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

A survey of design techniques for system-level dynamic power management

TL;DR: This paper describes how systems employ power-manageable components and how the use of dynamic reconfiguration can impact the overall power consumption, and survey recent initiatives in standardizing the hardware/software interface to enable software-controlled power management of hardware components.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Bandwidth-constrained mapping of cores onto NoC architectures

TL;DR: NMAP is presented, a fast algorithm that maps the cores onto a mesh NoC architecture under bandwidth constraints, minimizing the average communication delay, and the NMAP algorithm is presented for both single minimum-path routing and split-traffic routing.
Journal ArticleDOI

NoC synthesis flow for customized domain specific multiprocessor systems-on-chip

TL;DR: This work illustrates a complete synthesis flow, called Netchip, for customized NoC architectures, that partitions the development work into major steps (topology mapping, selection, and generation) and provides proper tools for their automatic execution (SUNMAP, xpipescompiler).