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ISLPED
2005
ACM

Power reduction by varying sampling rate

13 years 10 months ago
Power reduction by varying sampling rate
The rate at which a digital signal processing (DSP) system operates depends on the highest frequency component in the input signal. DSP applications must sample their inputs at a frequency at least twice the highest frequency in the input signal (i.e., the Nyquist rate) to accurately reproduce the signal. Typically a fixed sampling rate, guaranteed to always be high enough, is used. However, an input signal may have periods when the signal has little high frequency content as well as periods of silence. When the input signal has no perceptible high frequency components, the system can reduce its sampling rate, thereby reducing the number of samples processed per second, allowing the CPU speed to be scaled down without reducing output quality. This paper describes how to reduce power consumption in DSP applications by varying the amount of processing based on the input signal, and reports results of experiments with a prototype implementation. Experiments with a prototype show that wh...
William R. Dieter, Srabosti Datta, Wong Key Kai
Added 26 Jun 2010
Updated 26 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2005
Where ISLPED
Authors William R. Dieter, Srabosti Datta, Wong Key Kai
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