- MISD
In
computing , MISD (Multiple Instruction, Single Data) is a type ofparallel computing architecture where many functional units perform different operations on the same data. Pipeline architectures belong to this type, though a purist might say that the data is different after processing by each stage in the pipeline. Fault-tolerant computers executing the same instructions redundantly in order to detect and mask errors, in a manner known as task replication, may be considered to belong to this type. Not many instances of this architecture exist, asMIMD andSIMD are often more appropriate for common data parallel techniques. Specifically, they allow better scaling and use of computational resources than MISD does.Some argue that a
systolic array is an example of a MISD structure. [Quinn, Michael J. Parallel Programming in C with MPI and OpenMP.Boston: McGraw Hill, 2004.] [Ibaroudene, Djaffer. "Parallel Processing, EG6370G: Chapter 1, Motivation and History." St Mary's University, San Antonio, TX. Spring 2008.]Footnotes
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