Abstract

The approximate computing paradigm emerged as a key alternative for trading off accuracy and energy efficiency. Error-tolerant applications, such as multimedia and signal processing, can process the information with lower-than-standard accuracy at the circuit level while still fulfilling a good and acceptable service quality at the application level. The automatic detection of R-peaks in an electrocardiogram (ECG) signal is the essential step preceding ECG processing and analysis. The Haar discrete wavelet transform (HDWT) is a low-complexity pre-processing filter suitable to detect ECG R-peaks in embedded systems like wearable devices, which are incredibly energy-constrained. This work presents an approximate HDWT hardware architecture for ECG processing at very high energy efficiency. Our best-proposal employing pruning within the approximate HDWT hardware architecture requires just seven additions. The use of a truncation technique to improve energy efficiency is also investigated herein by observing the evolution of the signal-to-noise ratio and the ultimate impact in the ECG peak-detection application. This research finds that our HDWT approximate hardware architecture proposal accepts higher truncation levels than the original HDWT. In summary: Our results show about 9 times energy reduction when combining our HDWT matrix approximation proposal with the pruning and the highest acceptable level of truncation while still maintaining the R-peak detection performance accuracy of 99.68% on average.

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