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Margaret Martonosi

Researcher at Princeton University

Publications -  291
Citations -  24870

Margaret Martonosi is an academic researcher from Princeton University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cache & Quantum computer. The author has an hindex of 71, co-authored 277 publications receiving 23162 citations. Previous affiliations of Margaret Martonosi include Harvard University & National Science Foundation.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Wattch: a framework for architectural-level power analysis and optimizations

TL;DR: Wattch is presented, a framework for analyzing and optimizing microprocessor power dissipation at the architecture-level and opens up the field of power-efficient computing to a wider range of researchers by providing a power evaluation methodology within the portable and familiar SimpleScalar framework.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Energy-efficient computing for wildlife tracking: design tradeoffs and early experiences with ZebraNet

TL;DR: The goal is to use the least energy, storage, and other resources necessary to maintain a reliable system with a very high `data homing' success rate and it is believed that the domain-centric protocols and energy tradeoffs presented here for ZebraNet will have general applicability in other wireless and sensor applications.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Dynamic thermal management for high-performance microprocessors

TL;DR: This work investigates dynamic thermal management as a technique to control CPU power dissipation and explores the tradeoffs between several mechanisms for responding to periods of thermal trauma and the effects of hardware and software implementations.
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Cache decay: exploiting generational behavior to reduce cache leakage power

TL;DR: This paper discusses policies and implementations for reducing cache leakage by invalidating and “turning off” cache lines when they hold data not likely to be reused, and proposes adaptive policies that effectively reduce LI cache leakage energy by 5x for the SPEC2000 with only negligible degradations in performance.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

An Analysis of Efficient Multi-Core Global Power Management Policies: Maximizing Performance for a Given Power Budget

TL;DR: The results show that the best architected policies can come within 1% of the performance of an ideal oracle, while meeting a given chip-level power budget, and are significantly better than static management, even if static scheduling is given oracular knowledge.