Comparative Performance Analysis of Intel (R) Xeon Phi (TM), GPU, and CPU: A Case Study from Microscopy Image Analysis
We study and characterize the performance of operations in an important class of applications on GPUs and Many Integrated Core (MIC) architectures. Our work is motivated by applications that analyze low-dimensional spatial datasets captured by high resolution sensors, such as image datasets obtained...
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| Published in | 2014 IEEE 28th International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium Vol. 2014; pp. 1063 - 1072 |
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| Main Authors | , , , , |
| Format | Conference Proceeding Journal Article |
| Language | English |
| Published |
United States
IEEE
01.05.2014
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| Subjects | |
| Online Access | Get full text |
| ISBN | 1479937991 9781479937998 |
| ISSN | 1530-2075 1045-9219 1558-2183 |
| DOI | 10.1109/IPDPS.2014.111 |
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| Summary: | We study and characterize the performance of operations in an important class of applications on GPUs and Many Integrated Core (MIC) architectures. Our work is motivated by applications that analyze low-dimensional spatial datasets captured by high resolution sensors, such as image datasets obtained from whole slide tissue specimens using microscopy scanners. Common operations in these applications involve the detection and extraction of objects (object segmentation), the computation of features of each extracted object (feature computation), and characterization of objects based on these features (object classification). In this work, we have identify the data access and computation patterns of operations in the object segmentation and feature computation categories. We systematically implement and evaluate the performance of these operations on modern CPUs, GPUs, and MIC systems for a microscopy image analysis application. Our results show that the performance on a MIC of operations that perform regular data access is comparable or sometimes better than that on a GPU. On the other hand, GPUs are significantly more efficient than MICs for operations that access data irregularly. This is a result of the low performance of MICs when it comes to random data access. We also have examined the coordinated use of MICs and CPUs. Our experiments show that using a performance aware task strategy for scheduling application operations improves performance about 1.29× over a first-come-first-served strategy. This allows applications to obtain high performance efficiency on CPU-MIC systems - the example application attained an efficiency of 84% on 192 nodes (3072 CPU cores and 192 MICs). |
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| Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 teodoro@unb.br, tkurc@emory.edu, lee.cooper@emory.edu, jun.kong@emory.edu, jhsaltz@emory.edu |
| ISBN: | 1479937991 9781479937998 |
| ISSN: | 1530-2075 1045-9219 1558-2183 |
| DOI: | 10.1109/IPDPS.2014.111 |