107 research outputs found
Accelerating Deterministic and Stochastic Binarized Neural Networks on FPGAs Using OpenCL
Recent technological advances have proliferated the available computing
power, memory, and speed of modern Central Processing Units (CPUs), Graphics
Processing Units (GPUs), and Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs).
Consequently, the performance and complexity of Artificial Neural Networks
(ANNs) is burgeoning. While GPU accelerated Deep Neural Networks (DNNs)
currently offer state-of-the-art performance, they consume large amounts of
power. Training such networks on CPUs is inefficient, as data throughput and
parallel computation is limited. FPGAs are considered a suitable candidate for
performance critical, low power systems, e.g. the Internet of Things (IOT) edge
devices. Using the Xilinx SDAccel or Intel FPGA SDK for OpenCL development
environment, networks described using the high-level OpenCL framework can be
accelerated on heterogeneous platforms. Moreover, the resource utilization and
power consumption of DNNs can be further enhanced by utilizing regularization
techniques that binarize network weights. In this paper, we introduce, to the
best of our knowledge, the first FPGA-accelerated stochastically binarized DNN
implementations, and compare them to implementations accelerated using both
GPUs and FPGAs. Our developed networks are trained and benchmarked using the
popular MNIST and CIFAR-10 datasets, and achieve near state-of-the-art
performance, while offering a >16-fold improvement in power consumption,
compared to conventional GPU-accelerated networks. Both our FPGA-accelerated
determinsitic and stochastic BNNs reduce inference times on MNIST and CIFAR-10
by >9.89x and >9.91x, respectively.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
- …