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STMicro face-recognition processor includes FPGA core
STMicro face-recognition processor includes FPGA core SAN JOSE, Calif. Looking to design a face-recognition processor that wouldn't get bogged down by heavy-duty algorithms, researchers at STMicroelectronics developed a unique chip architecture that combines a configurable processor from Tensilica Inc. and an embedded FPGA core. The image processor uses Tensilica's Xtensa processor running at 200 MHz and special instructions to cut through the tougher face-recognition algorithms used to process 250-line images. Using C code extensions tailored for the Xtensa processor, the chip can execute four of these algorithms in 1.26 seconds, versus 10.7 seconds using only C code. Using a database of 20 faces, the face-recognition algorithm itself took 68 percent of the total processing time, STMicro said. Linked to the Xtensa processor through a special bus is an FPGA block, which serves to generate the C code extensions. "In this way the FPGA acts as a [Tensilica instruction extension] conta iner but it's also used as a programmable master/slave and for general purpose I/O," said STMicro researcher Francesco Lertora. Designed as a research vehicle, the 5.5 x 5.5-mm test chip was built using 0.18-micron design rules. More Embedded Processor Forum coverage.
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