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Processing data in or near memory (PIM), as opposed to in conventional computational units in a processor, can greatly alleviate the performance and energy penalties of data transfers from/to main memory. Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) architectures and applications, where main memory bandwidth is a critical bottleneck, can benefit from the use of PIM. To this end, an application should be properly partitioned and scheduled to execute on either the main, powerful GPU cores that are far away from memory or the auxiliary, simple GPU cores that are close to memory (e.g., in the logic layer of 3D-stacked DRAM).
Pattnaik et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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