24 research outputs found
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Algorithm and Hardware Co-Design for Local/Edge Computing
Advances in VLSI manufacturing and design technology over the decades have created many computing paradigms for disparate computing needs. With concerns for transmission cost, security, latency of centralized computing, edge/local computing are increasingly prevalent in the faster growing sectors like Internet-of-Things (IoT) and other sectors that require energy/connectivity autonomous systems such as biomedical and industrial applications.
Energy and power efficient are the main design constraints in local and edge computing. While there exists a wide range of low power design techniques, they are often underutilized in custom circuit designs as the algorithms are developed independent of the hardware. Such compartmentalized design approach fails to take advantage of the many compatible algorithmic and hardware techniques that can improve the efficiency of the entire system. Algorithm hardware co-design is to explore the design space with whole stack awareness.
The main goal of the algorithm hardware co-design methodology is the enablement and improvement of small form factor edge and local VLSI systems operating under strict constraints of area and energy efficiency. This thesis presents selected works of application specific digital and mixed-signal integrated circuit designs. The application space ranges from implantable biomedical devices to edge machine learning acceleration
Low-Power Circuits for Brain–Machine Interfaces
This paper presents work on ultra-low-power circuits for brain–machine interfaces with applications for paralysis prosthetics, stroke, Parkinson’s disease, epilepsy, prosthetics for the blind, and experimental neuroscience systems. The circuits include a micropower neural amplifier with adaptive power biasing for use
in multi-electrode arrays; an analog linear decoding and learning
architecture for data compression; low-power radio-frequency
(RF) impedance-modulation circuits for data telemetry that
minimize power consumption of implanted systems in the body;
a wireless link for efficient power transfer; mixed-signal system
integration for efficiency, robustness, and programmability; and
circuits for wireless stimulation of neurons with power-conserving
sleep modes and awake modes. Experimental results from chips
that have stimulated and recorded from neurons in the zebra
finch brain and results from RF power-link, RF data-link, electrode-
recording and electrode-stimulating systems are presented.
Simulations of analog learning circuits that have successfully
decoded prerecorded neural signals from a monkey brain are also
presented
Glucose-powered neuroelectronics
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2011.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 157-164).A holy grail of bioelectronics is to engineer biologically implantable systems that can be embedded without disturbing their local environments, while harvesting from their surroundings all of the power they require. As implantable electronic devices become increasingly prevalent in scientific research and in the diagnosis, management, and treatment of human disease, there is correspondingly increasing demand for devices with unlimited functional lifetimes that integrate seamlessly with their hosts in these two ways. This thesis presents significant progress toward establishing the feasibility of one such system: A brain-machine interface powered by a bioimplantable fuel cell that harvests energy from extracellular glucose in the cerebrospinal fluid surrounding the brain. The first part of this thesis describes a set of biomimetic algorithms and low-power circuit architectures for decoding electrical signals from ensembles of neurons in the brain. The decoders are intended for use in the context of neural rehabilitation, to provide paralyzed or otherwise disabled patients with instantaneous, natural, thought-based control of robotic prosthetic limbs and other external devices. This thesis presents a detailed discussion of the decoding algorithms, descriptions of the low-power analog and digital circuit architectures used to implement the decoders, and results validating their performance when applied to decode real neural data. A major constraint on brain-implanted electronic devices is the requirement that they consume and dissipate very little power, so as not to damage surrounding brain tissue. The systems described here address that constraint, computing in the style of biological neural networks, and using arithmetic-free, purely logical primitives to establish universal computing architectures for neural decoding. The second part of this thesis describes the development of an implantable fuel cell powered by extracellular glucose at concentrations such as those found in the cerebrospinal fluid surrounding the brain. The theoretical foundations, details of design and fabrication, mechanical and electrochemical characterization, as well as in vitro performance data for the fuel cell are presented.by Benjamin Isaac Rapoport.Ph.D
Efficient Universal Computing Architectures for Decoding Neural Activity
The ability to decode neural activity into meaningful control signals for prosthetic devices is critical to the development of clinically useful brain– machine interfaces (BMIs). Such systems require input from tens to hundreds of brain-implanted recording electrodes in order to deliver robust and accurate performance; in serving that primary function they should also minimize power dissipation in order to avoid damaging neural tissue; and they should transmit data wirelessly in order to minimize the risk of infection associated with chronic, transcutaneous implants. Electronic architectures for brain– machine interfaces must therefore minimize size and power consumption, while maximizing the ability to compress data to be transmitted over limited-bandwidth wireless channels. Here we present a system of extremely low computational complexity, designed for real-time decoding of neural signals, and suited for highly scalable implantable systems. Our programmable architecture is an explicit implementation of a universal computing machine emulating the dynamics of a network of integrate-and-fire neurons; it requires no arithmetic operations except for counting, and decodes neural signals using only computationally inexpensive logic operations. The simplicity of this architecture does not compromise its ability to compress raw neural data by factors greater than . We describe a set of decoding algorithms based on this computational architecture, one designed to operate within an implanted system, minimizing its power consumption and data transmission bandwidth; and a complementary set of algorithms for learning, programming the decoder, and postprocessing the decoded output, designed to operate in an external, nonimplanted unit. The implementation of the implantable portion is estimated to require fewer than 5000 operations per second. A proof-of-concept, 32-channel field-programmable gate array (FPGA) implementation of this portion is consequently energy efficient. We validate the performance of our overall system by decoding electrophysiologic data from a behaving rodent.United States. National Institutes of Health (Grant NS056140
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Very-Large-Scale-Integration Circuit Techniques in Internet-of-Things Applications
Heading towards the era of Internet-of-things (IoT) means both opportunity and challenge for the circuit-design community. In a system where billions of devices are equipped with the ability to sense, compute, communicate with each other and perform tasks in a coordinated manner, security and power management are among the most critical challenges.
Physically unclonable function (PUF) emerges as an important security primitive in hardware-security applications; it provides an object-specific physical identifier hidden within the intrinsic device variations, which is hard to expose and reproduce by adversaries. Yet, designing a compact PUF robust to noise, temperature and voltage remains a challenge.
This thesis presents a novel PUF design approach based on a pair of ultra-compact analog circuits whose output is proportional to absolute temperature. The proposed approach is demonstrated through two works: (1) an ultra-compact and robust PUF based on voltage-compensated proportional-to-absolute-temperature voltage generators that occupies 8.3× less area than the previous work with the similar robustness and twice the robustness of the previously most compact PUF design and (2) a technique to transform a 6T-SRAM array into a robust analog PUF with minimal overhead. In this work, similar circuit topology is used to transform a preexisting on-chip SRAM into a PUF, which further reduces the area in (1) with no robustness penalty.
In this thesis, we also explore techniques for power management circuit design.
Energy harvesting is an essential functionality in an IoT sensor node, where battery replacement is cost-prohibitive or impractical. Yet, existing energy-harvesting power management units (EH PMU) suffer from efficiency loss in the two-step voltage conversion: harvester-to-battery and battery-to-load. We propose an EH PMU architecture with hybrid energy storage, where a capacitor is introduced in addition to the battery to serve as an intermediate energy buffer to minimize the battery involvement in the system energy flow. Test-case measurements show as much as a 2.2× improvement in the end-to-end energy efficiency.
In contrast, with the drastically reduced power consumption of IoT nodes that operates in the sub-threshold regime, adaptive dynamic voltage scaling (DVS) for supply-voltage margin removal, fully on-chip integration and high power conversion efficiency (PCE) are required in PMU designs. We present a PMU–load co-design based on a fully integrated switched-capacitor DC-DC converter (SC-DC) and hybrid error/replica-based regulation for a fully digital PMU control. The PMU is integrated with a neural spike processor (NSP) that achieves a record-low power consumption of 0.61 µW for 96 channels. A tunable replica circuit is added to assist the error regulation and prevent loss of regulation. With automatic energy-robustness co-optimization, the PMU can set the SC-DC’s optimal conversion ratio and switching frequency. The PMU achieves a PCE of 77.7% (72.2%) at VIN = 0.6 V (1 V) and at the NSP’s margin-free operating point