Graph algorithms such as graph traversal have been gaining ever-increasing importance in the era of big data. However, graph processing on traditional architectures issues many random and irregular memory accesses, leading to a huge number of data movements and the consumption of very large amounts of energy. To minimize the waste of memory bandwidth, we investigate utilizing processing-in-memory (PIM), combined with non-volatile metal-oxide resistive random access memory (ReRAM), to improve both computation and I/O performance.
We propose a new ReRAM-based processing-in-memory architecture called RPBFS, in which graph data can be persistently stored and processed in place. We study the problem of graph traversal, and we design an efficient graph traversal algorithm in RPBFS. Benefiting from low data movement overhead and high bank-level parallel computation, RPBFS shows a significant performance improvement compared with both the CPU-based and the GPU-based BFS implementations. On a suite of real-world graphs, our architecture yields a speedup in graph traversal performance of up to 33.8×, and achieves a reduction in energy over conventional systems of up to 142.8×.
Tracking a car or a person in a city is crucial for urban safety management. How can we complete the task with minimal number of spatiotemporal searches from massive camera records? This paper proposes a strategy named IHMs (Intermediate Searching at Heuristic Moments): each step we figure out which moment is the best to search according to a heuristic indicator, then at that moment search locations one by one in descending order of predicted appearing probabilities, until a search hits; iterate this step until we get the object's current location. Five searching strategies are compared in experiments, and IHMs is validated to be most efficient, which can save up to 1/3 total costs. This result provides an evidence that "searching at intermediate moments can save cost".
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.