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Dive into the research topics where Steven Edward Millman is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven Edward Millman.


ieee international conference on high performance computing data and analytics | 2014

Real-time scalable cortical computing at 46 giga-synaptic OPS/watt with ~100× speedup in time-to-solution and ~100,000× reduction in energy-to-solution

Andrew S. Cassidy; Rodrigo Alvarez-Icaza; Filipp Akopyan; Jun Sawada; John V. Arthur; Paul A. Merolla; Pallab Datta; Marc Gonzalez Tallada; Brian Taba; Alexander Andreopoulos; Arnon Amir; Steven K. Esser; Jeff Kusnitz; Rathinakumar Appuswamy; Chuck Haymes; Bernard Brezzo; Roger Moussalli; Ralph Bellofatto; Christian W. Baks; Michael Mastro; Kai Schleupen; Charles Edwin Cox; Ken Inoue; Steven Edward Millman; Nabil Imam; Emmett McQuinn; Yutaka Nakamura; Ivan Vo; Chen Guok; Don Nguyen

Drawing on neuroscience, we have developed a parallel, event-driven kernel for neurosynaptic computation, that is efficient with respect to computation, memory, and communication. Building on the previously demonstrated highly optimized software expression of the kernel, here, we demonstrate True North, a co-designed silicon expression of the kernel. True North achieves five orders of magnitude reduction in energy to-solution and two orders of magnitude speedup in time-to solution, when running computer vision applications and complex recurrent neural network simulations. Breaking path with the von Neumann architecture, True North is a 4,096 core, 1 million neuron, and 256 million synapse brain-inspired neurosynaptic processor, that consumes 65mW of power running at real-time and delivers performance of 46 Giga-Synaptic OPS/Watt. We demonstrate seamless tiling of True North chips into arrays, forming a foundation for cortex-like scalability. True Norths unprecedented time-to-solution, energy-to-solution, size, scalability, and performance combined with the underlying flexibility of the kernel enable a broad range of cognitive applications.


electronic imaging | 1999

Measurement and digital compensation of cross talk and photoleakage in high-resolution TFT LCDs

Steven L. Wright; Steven Edward Millman; Manabu Kodate

Capacitance crosstalk and TFT photoleakage affect the transmission-voltage array characteristics in high- resolution TFTLCDs. These effects depend upon the drive inversion scheme use, and are image-dependent. Photoleakage can also be a cause of flicker in TFTLCDs at low frame rates. One characterization method utilizes comparison of front-of-screen measurements with either measured test cells or theoretical cell characteristics. A second method utilizes digital crosstalk compensation, in which the image data provided to the panel is modified to offset the effects of crosstalk in various test image patterns.


Ibm Journal of Research and Development | 1998

A 10.5-in.-diagonal SXGA active-matrix display

Evan G. Colgan; Paul Matthew Alt; Robert L. Wisnieff; Peter M. Fryer; Eileen A. Galligan; William S. Graham; Paul F. Greier; Raymond Robert Horton; Harold Ifill; Leslie Charles Jenkins; Richard A. John; Richard I. Kaufman; Yue Kuo; Alphonso P. Lanzetta; Kenneth F. Latzko; Frank R. Libsch; Shui-Chih Alan Lien; Steven Edward Millman; Robert Wayne Nywening; Robert J. Polastre; Carl G. Powell; Rick A. Rand; John J. Ritsko; Mary Beth Rothwell; John L. Staples; Kevin W. Warren; J. Wilson; Steven L. Wright

A 157-dot-per-inch, 262K-color, 10.5-in.- diagonal, 1280 × 1024 (SXGA) display has been fabricated using a six-mask process with Cu or Al-alloy thin-film gates. The combination of high resolution and gray-scale accuracy has been shown to render color images and text with paperlike legibility. The low-resistivity gate metallization and trilayer-type TFTs with a channel length of 6-8 µm were fabricated with a six-mask process which is extendible to larger, higher-resolution displays. A combination of double-sided driving and active line repair was used so that open gate lines or data lines did not result in visible line defects. A flexible drive-electronics system was developed to address the display and characterize its performance under different drive conditions.


ieee international conference on high performance computing data and analytics | 2016

Truenorth ecosystem for brain-inspired computing: scalable systems, software, and applications

Jun Sawada; Filipp Akopyan; Andrew S. Cassidy; Brian Taba; Michael DeBole; Pallab Datta; Rodrigo Alvarez-Icaza; Arnon Amir; John V. Arthur; Alexander Andreopoulos; Rathinakumar Appuswamy; Heinz Baier; Davis; David J. Berg; Carmelo di Nolfo; Steven K. Esser; Myron Flickner; Thomas A. Horvath; Bryan L. Jackson; Jeff Kusnitz; Scott Lekuch; Michael Mastro; Timothy Melano; Paul A. Merolla; Steven Edward Millman; Tapan Kumar Nayak; Norm Pass; Hartmut Penner; William P. Risk; Kai Schleupen

This paper describes the hardware and software ecosystem encompassing the brain-inspired TrueNorth processor – a 70mW reconfigurable silicon chip with 1 million neurons, 256 million synapses, and 4096 parallel and distributed neural cores. For systems, we present a scale-out system loosely coupling 16 single-chip boards and a scale-up system tightly integrating 16 chips in a 4 × 4 configuration by exploiting TrueNorths native tiling. For software, we present an end-to-end ecosystem consisting of a simulator, a programming language, an integrated programming environment, a library of algorithms and applications, firmware, tools for deep learning, a teaching curriculum, and cloud enablement. For the scale-up systems we summarize our approach to physical placement of neural network, to reduce intra- and inter-chip network traffic. The ecosystem is in use at over 30 universities and government/corporate labs. Our platform is a substrate for a spectrum of applications from mobile and embedded computing to cloud and supercomputers.


SID Symposium Digest of Technical Papers | 2003

25.4: Color and Luminance Management for High-Resolution Liquid-Crystal Displays

Steven L. Wright; Steven Edward Millman; Chai Wah Wu; Paul F. Greier; K. Yamauchi; K. Numano; K. Sumiyoshi; Y. Hanabuchi; T. Miyamoto

A new method of color management is described which takes advantage of the high pixel density achievable with TFTLCDs. In this method, a calibration 10-bit look-up-table can be loaded into the monitor and implemented as a 2×2 spatial dither block to provide a 10-bit color palette for 8-bit color drive. Other subpixel dithering techniques are also described for monochrome and color high-resolution TFTLCDs. These techniques can create a very large palette, and combined with a 10-bit digital data source to achieve precise luminance and color calibration.


Archive | 2001

Method and apparatus for adjusting subpixel intensity values based upon luminance characteristics of the subpixels for improved viewing angle characteristics of liquid crystal displays

Paul F. Greier; Kenneth C. Ho; Richard I. Kaufman; Steven Edward Millman; Gerhard Robert Thompson; Steven L. Wright; Chai Wah Wu


Archive | 1996

Interruption tolerant video program viewing

Marc Herbert Brodsky; Steven Edward Millman; Thomas Kimber Worthington


Archive | 2009

System and method for selective image capture, transmission and reconstruction

Steven T. Berman; Paul F. Greier; Kenneth C. Ho; Richard I. Kaufman; Alphonso P. Lanzetta; Michael Mastro; Steven Edward Millman; Ron Ridgeway; Kai Schleupen; Steven L. Wright


Archive | 1987

Magnetic transducer crash anticipation and response method and apparatus

Roger F. Hoyt; Jefferson Cm; Steven Edward Millman


Archive | 2001

Adjusting subpixel intensity values based upon luminance characteristics of the subpixels in liquid crystal displays

Paul F. Greier; Kenneth C. Ho; Richard I. Kaufman; Steven Edward Millman; Gerhard Robert Thompson; Steven L. Wright; Chai W. Wu

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