15,588 research outputs found
Configurable 3D-integrated focal-plane sensor-processor array architecture
A mixed-signal Cellular Visual Microprocessor architecture with digital processors is
described. An ASIC implementation is also demonstrated. The architecture is composed of a
regular sensor readout circuit array, prepared for 3D face-to-face type integration, and one or
several cascaded array of mainly identical (SIMD) processing elements. The individual array
elements derived from the same general HDL description and could be of different in size, aspect
ratio, and computing resources
Digital implementation of the cellular sensor-computers
Two different kinds of cellular sensor-processor architectures are used nowadays in various
applications. The first is the traditional sensor-processor architecture, where the sensor and the
processor arrays are mapped into each other. The second is the foveal architecture, in which a
small active fovea is navigating in a large sensor array. This second architecture is introduced
and compared here. Both of these architectures can be implemented with analog and digital
processor arrays. The efficiency of the different implementation types, depending on the used
CMOS technology, is analyzed. It turned out, that the finer the technology is, the better to use
digital implementation rather than analog
MorphIC: A 65-nm 738k-Synapse/mm Quad-Core Binary-Weight Digital Neuromorphic Processor with Stochastic Spike-Driven Online Learning
Recent trends in the field of neural network accelerators investigate weight
quantization as a means to increase the resource- and power-efficiency of
hardware devices. As full on-chip weight storage is necessary to avoid the high
energy cost of off-chip memory accesses, memory reduction requirements for
weight storage pushed toward the use of binary weights, which were demonstrated
to have a limited accuracy reduction on many applications when
quantization-aware training techniques are used. In parallel, spiking neural
network (SNN) architectures are explored to further reduce power when
processing sparse event-based data streams, while on-chip spike-based online
learning appears as a key feature for applications constrained in power and
resources during the training phase. However, designing power- and
area-efficient spiking neural networks still requires the development of
specific techniques in order to leverage on-chip online learning on binary
weights without compromising the synapse density. In this work, we demonstrate
MorphIC, a quad-core binary-weight digital neuromorphic processor embedding a
stochastic version of the spike-driven synaptic plasticity (S-SDSP) learning
rule and a hierarchical routing fabric for large-scale chip interconnection.
The MorphIC SNN processor embeds a total of 2k leaky integrate-and-fire (LIF)
neurons and more than two million plastic synapses for an active silicon area
of 2.86mm in 65nm CMOS, achieving a high density of 738k synapses/mm.
MorphIC demonstrates an order-of-magnitude improvement in the area-accuracy
tradeoff on the MNIST classification task compared to previously-proposed SNNs,
while having no penalty in the energy-accuracy tradeoff.Comment: This document is the paper as accepted for publication in the IEEE
Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems journal (2019), the
fully-edited paper is available at
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/876400
Memory and information processing in neuromorphic systems
A striking difference between brain-inspired neuromorphic processors and
current von Neumann processors architectures is the way in which memory and
processing is organized. As Information and Communication Technologies continue
to address the need for increased computational power through the increase of
cores within a digital processor, neuromorphic engineers and scientists can
complement this need by building processor architectures where memory is
distributed with the processing. In this paper we present a survey of
brain-inspired processor architectures that support models of cortical networks
and deep neural networks. These architectures range from serial clocked
implementations of multi-neuron systems to massively parallel asynchronous ones
and from purely digital systems to mixed analog/digital systems which implement
more biological-like models of neurons and synapses together with a suite of
adaptation and learning mechanisms analogous to the ones found in biological
nervous systems. We describe the advantages of the different approaches being
pursued and present the challenges that need to be addressed for building
artificial neural processing systems that can display the richness of behaviors
seen in biological systems.Comment: Submitted to Proceedings of IEEE, review of recently proposed
neuromorphic computing platforms and system
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