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Non-Parametric Dual-Manifold Mapping via 8-Bit Bounded Transformation Matrices: Challenging FP-centric Hardware Paradigms in Low-Energy AI

Lars Kopp 2026-06-14

The paper addresses the problem of high energy costs from floating-point arithmetic in deep learning hardware. It proposes a non-parametric, training-free framework using 8-bit signed integer transformation matrices and bitwise logic for dual-manifold mapping. Experimental evidence shows near-perfect reconstruction under 90% truncation sparsity and 20% random node destruction, demonstrating extreme holographic resilience. This matters because it challenges the necessity of dense, floating-point-centric GPU accelerators, enabling a shift toward low-energy neuromorphic edge-computing.

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Partitioned Tags, Shared Data: Reconciling Strict Cache Isolation with Write-Shared Coherence

Kartik Ramkrishnan, Stephen McCamant, Antonia Zhai, Pen Chung Yew 2026-06-14

SCP solves the problem that write-shared coherence fails under strict cache partitioning, a decade-old barrier to deploying eviction-based side-channel defenses in secure shared-OS settings. The method partitions only the tags while sharing a single data pool, sizes the data pool to prevent capacity-driven cross-partition eviction, and routes writes to the LLC after a leakage threshold to mitigate coherence-based leakage. Experimental evidence from gem5 shows SCP mitigates Prime+Probe, Flush+Reload, and shared-writeable-line attacks to no better than random guessing, with a +2.8% LLC SRAM hardware cost and IPC within 0.3% of DAWG on SPEC CPU2017. This matters because SCP reconciles strict cache isolation with write-shared coherence, enabling secure partitioning without sacrificing performance or coherence correctness.

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ITME: Inference Tiered Memory Expansion with Disaggregated CXL-Hybrid Memories

Hakbeom Jang, Younghoon Min, Sunwoong Kim, Taeyoung Ahn 2026-06-14

ITME addresses the problem of scaling shared context infrastructure for TB-scale LLM inference workloads beyond individual server capacity. The method leverages CXL-hybrid memory to provide massive, byte-addressable remote memory expansion, simplifying the software stack by eliminating complex software-level optimization. Experimental evidence from production-grade SK Hynix CMM and PCIe Gen5 NVMe SSDs, along with an FPGA prototype, shows up to a 35.7% throughput improvement over conventional CPU-offloading. This matters because ITME enables cost-efficient scaling of shared context layers for agentic and long-context LLMs by proactively managing data movement across the memory-storage hierarchy.

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SupraSNN: Exploiting Synapse-Level Parallelism in Spiking Neural Network Accelerators through Co-Optimized Mapping and Scheduling

Seyed Sadra Ghavami, Mohammad Hossein Nikkhah, Mohammad Rasoul Roshanshah, Saeed Safari 2026-06-14

The problem is that deploying Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) on hardware is limited by the challenge of managing massive parallelism, analogous to the historical barrier of serial execution in processors. The method introduces SupraSNN, a superscalar-inspired hardware-software co-design framework that treats synaptic events as parallelizable micro-operations, using a Multi-Cast Tree, parallel Synapse Processing Units, and a Merge Tree with a unified Neuron Unit. Experimental evidence shows that on a Xilinx Zynq XC7Z020 FPGA, SupraSNN achieves 149 μs inference latency and 0.025 mJ per image for MNIST (93.44% accuracy), delivering 47.6% lower latency and 5.6× better energy efficiency than prior FPGA-based SNN accelerators. This matters because it demonstrates a practical path to high synapse-level parallelism and energy efficiency for SNN deployment, extending to recurrent SNNs on the Spiking Heidelberg Dataset.

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An LLM System for Autonomous Variational Quantum Circuit Design

Kenya Sakka, Wataru Mizukami, Kosuke Mitarai 2026-06-14

The problem is that designing high-performing quantum circuits remains heavily reliant on human expertise. The method introduces an autonomous agentic framework using LLMs with seven integrated components for iterative circuit design under explicit constraints. Experimental evidence shows the framework outperforms representative quantum feature maps on image classification and achieves competitive accuracy for molecular ground state estimation across seven molecules. This matters because it establishes LLM-driven agentic systems as a viable paradigm for automated quantum circuit design and demonstrates AI's role in iterative scientific optimization.

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Attention by Synchronization in Coupled Oscillator Networks

Fabio Pasqualetti, Taosha Guo 2026-06-14

The problem is that softmax attention requires exponentiation and global reduction, which are energy-expensive on von Neumann hardware and lack a natural physical analog. The method replaces softmax with Kuramoto synchronization dynamics, where queries are fixed anchors on a sphere and free oscillators equilibrate to encode attention weights via cosine similarity. Experimental evidence shows that at oscillator dimension 2, oscillator attention outperforms softmax on keyword spotting (+1.00 pp) and subject-verb agreement (+5.27 pp), while on causal language modeling it closes the perplexity gap as dimension increases, from +11.09 to +2.98 on WikiText-2 and from +2.39 to +0.57 on TinyStories. This matters because it provides a mathematically grounded blueprint for accurate attention on energy-constrained physical substrates without requiring exponentiation or global reduction.

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Specifying Hardware Communication as Programs

Ernest Ng, Nikil Shyamsunder, Francis Pham, Adrian Sampson 2026-06-14

The problem is that hardware testing requires separate driver and monitor programs for each protocol, leading to manual effort and inconsistency risks. The method proposes a DSL that specifies hardware communication protocols as succinct imperative programs, enabling a single specification to both drive and monitor transactions. The abstract does not disclose experimental results, but describes a tool that automatically infers transaction-level traces from waveforms using the DSL specification. This matters because it could eliminate redundant code and reduce bugs in hardware verification for protocols like Wishbone and AXI-Stream.

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