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A Scalable Framework for Monte Carlo Simulation Using FPGA-based Hardware Accelerators with Application to SPECT Imaging

Phillip J. Kinsman
McMaster University
McMaster University, 2012

@article{kinsman2012scalable,

   title={A Scalable Framework for Monte Carlo Simulation Using FPGA-based Hardware Accelerators with Application to SPECT Imaging},

   author={Kinsman, P.J.},

   year={2012},

   publisher={McMaster University Library}

}

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As the number of transistors that are integrated onto a silicon die continues to increase, the compute power is becoming a commodity. This has enabled a whole host of new applications that rely on high-throughput computations. Recently, the need for faster and cost-effective applications in form-factor constrained environments has driven an interest in on-chip acceleration of algorithms based on Monte Carlo simulations. Though Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), with hundreds of on-chip arithmetic units, show significant promise for accelerating these embarrassingly parallel simulations, a challenge exists in sharing access to simulation data amongst many concurrent experiments. This thesis presents a compute architecture for accelerating Monte Carlo simulations based on the Network-on-Chip (NoC) paradigm for on-chip communication. We demonstrate through the complete implementation of a Monte Carlo-based image reconstruction algorithm for Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) imaging that this complex problem can be accelerated by two orders of magnitude on even a modestly-sized FPGA over a 2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Processor. Futhermore, we have created a framework for further increasing parallelism by scaling our architecture across multiple compute devices and by extending our original design to a multi-FPGA system nearly linear increase in acceleration with logic resources was achieved.
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