There are three project options. Both options require that you submit a written proposal by Oct 6, 2011. You may work in groups of two; the scope of the project must be larger for group projects.
1. Propose your own topic. Webpage will be updated with some suggested topics or stop by my office to discuss your idea. Find a way to integrate a project about interconnection networks with your research.
2. Pick a recent paper (can be one we discuss in class) from a top-tier conference and validate part of its results.
3. Literature survey (must be done individually). Select subtopic within interconnection networks and do an in-depth literature survey. Must read a minimum of 12 papers. Must synthesize papers; cannot be individual paper summaries.
Project Proposal (due Oct 6, 2011) worth 25% of project grade
Project Proposal: Options 1 and 2
The project proposal should be at most two pages (please be concise). You must address the following in your project proposal:
1. Topic of project. This section should also include motivation for this work. Give reasons why this project is interesting and useful from the perspective of interconnection network design.
2. Methodology and Goals. Explain how you will evaluate your proposed idea. What simulation infrastructure will you use? What benchmarks will you use? You should explain what experiments you will be performing. Justify why these experiments are relevant. If you are validating an existing study, state which parts you will validate (you do not need to validate all the results). You may also add additional experiments that were absent from the original paper; explain how these may provide additional insight.
3. Schedule. Break your project down into bi-weekly tasks/milestones. Describe the deliverables you will have completed by the Progress Report due date (Nov 10, 2011).
4. Related work. If proposing a novel topic, please cite and explain some relevant related work.
This plan may evolve as you begin your implementation but you must start with a clearly articulated plan.
Project Proposal: Option 3 (Literature Survey)
1. Select literature survey topic.
2. Identify and read 2 papers
3. Critique these papers
Progress Report (due Nov 10, 2011) worth 15% of project grade
E-mail a brief progress report (1 page).
Option 1 and 2: Discuss current status of project, any difficulties encountered and anticipated changes from original project proposal. Provide deliverables described in initial progress proposal.
Project Option 3: Identify all 12 papers and include short critique of two papers (beyond those in the proposal).
Final Project Presentation (due Dec 15, 2011) and Report (due Dec 22, 2011) worth 60% of project grade
The final project grade will be assigned based on both the report and the presentation. The presentation will represent 20% of the overall project grade. The final report will compose 40% of the overall project grade.
Presentation Guidelines
You will be required to give a 8 minute (tentative) presentation on the last day of class (Dec 15) with an additional 2-3 minutes per project for questions.
Report Guidelines: Option 1 and 2
Try to limit this to at most 6 pages, in 2 column conference format. Be concise and do not use all 6 pages if you do not need to.
1. Introduction: include topic of project and the motivation for this work.
2. Architecture/Design: If proposing a novel architecture, describe your design. If re-evaluating an existing paper, describe any limitations that lead to the need to validate the previous results.
3. Methodology: how did you evaluate this project? What tools/benchmarks were used? What parameters were used to configure your design? What are the limitations of your methodology?
4. Results: present results from your experiments. If this is a novel project, explain what insights these results provide and how they compare (quantitatively or qualitatively) against prior work. If this is a validation project, explain discrepancies or similarities between your results and the results in the paper.
5. Future directions: how would you extend this project? What do your results suggest about the future of on-chip network research.
Report Guidelines: Option 3
Length: 10 pages (2-column format). Critical analysis and synthesis of 12 papers on one topic.
Project Resources
Suggested project ideas will be posted on the course Blackboard page in late September.