A Parallel Architecture for Meaning Comparison Conference Paper uri icon

abstract

  • In this paper we present a fine grained parallel architecture that performs meaning comparison using vector cosine similarity (dot product). Meaning comparison assigns a similarity value to two objects (e.g. text documents) based on how similar their meanings (represented as two vectors) are to each other. The novelty of our design is the fine grained parallelism which is not exploited in available hardware based dot product processor designs and can not be achieved in traditional server class processors like the Intel Xeon. We compare the performance of our design against that of available hardware based dot product processors as well a server class processor using optimum software code performing the same computation. We show that our hardware design can achieve a speedup of 62,000 times compared to an available hardware design and a speedup of 8866 times with 33% (1.5 times) less power consumption, compared to software code running on Intel Xeon processor for 1024 basis vectors. Our design can significantly reduce the amount of servers required for similarity comparison in a distributed search engine. Thus it can enable reduction in energy consumption, investment, operational costs and floor area in search engine data centers. This design can also be deployed for other applications which require fast dot product computation. 2010 IEEE.

name of conference

  • 2010 IEEE International Symposium on Parallel & Distributed Processing (IPDPS)

published proceedings

  • 2010 IEEE International Symposium on Parallel & Distributed Processing (IPDPS)

altmetric score

  • 3

author list (cited authors)

  • Mohan, S., Biswas, A., Tripathy, A., Pannigrahy, J., & Mahapatra, R.

citation count

  • 3

complete list of authors

  • Mohan, Suneil||Biswas, Amitava||Tripathy, Aalap||Pannigrahy, Jagannath||Mahapatra, Rabi

publication date

  • January 2010