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The enormous growth of AI computing has led to a surging demand for electricity. To stem the resulting energy cost and environmental impact, this paper explores opportunities enabled by the increasing hardware heterogeneity and introduces the concept of Geographical Server Relocation (GSR). Specifically, GSR physically balances the available AI servers across geographically distributed data centers subject to AI computing demand and power capacity constraints in each location. The key idea of GSR is to relocate older and less energy-efficient servers to regions with more renewables, better water efficiencies and/or lower electricity prices. Our case study demonstrates that, even with modest flexibility of relocation, GSR can substantially reduce the total operational environmental footprints and operation costs of AI computing. We conclude this paper by discussing major challenges of GSR, including service migration, software management, and algorithms.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available July 9, 2025
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Public models offer predictions to a variety of downstream tasks and have played a crucial role in various AI applications, showcasing their proficiency in accurate predictions. However, the exclusive emphasis on prediction accuracy may not align with the diverse end objectives of downstream agents. Recognizing the public model's predictions as a service, we advocate for integrating the objectives of downstream agents into the optimization process. Concretely, to address performance disparities and foster fairness among heterogeneous agents in training, we propose a novel Equitable Objective. This objective, coupled with a policy gradient algorithm, is crafted to train the public model to produce a more equitable/uniform performance distribution across downstream agents, each with their unique concerns. Both theoretical analysis and empirical case studies have proven the effectiveness of our method in advancing performance equity across diverse downstream agents utilizing the public model for their decision-making.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available July 24, 2025
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Brain-Computer interfaces (BCIs) are typically designed to be lightweight and responsive in real-time to provide users timely feedback. Classical feature engineering is computationally efficient but has low accuracy, whereas the recent neural networks (DNNs) improve accuracy but are computationally expensive and incur high latency. As a promising alternative, the low-dimensional computing (LDC) classifier based on vector symbolic architecture (VSA), achieves small model size yet higher accuracy than classical feature engineering methods. However, its accuracy still lags behind that of modern DNNs, making it challenging to process complex brain signals. To improve the accuracy of a small model, knowledge distillation is a popular method. However, maintaining a constant level of distillation between the teacher and student models may not be the best way for a growing student during its progressive learning stages. In this work, we propose a simple scheduled knowledge distillation method based on curriculum data order to enable the student to gradually build knowledge from the teacher model, controlled by an alpha scheduler. Meanwhile, we employ the LDC/VSA as the student model to enhance the on-device inference efficiency for tiny BCI devices that demand low latency. The empirical results have demonstrated that our approach achieves better tradeoff between accuracy and hardware efficiency compared to other methods.more » « less