70 research outputs found
Extended Bit-Plane Compression for Convolutional Neural Network Accelerators
After the tremendous success of convolutional neural networks in image
classification, object detection, speech recognition, etc., there is now rising
demand for deployment of these compute-intensive ML models on tightly power
constrained embedded and mobile systems at low cost as well as for pushing the
throughput in data centers. This has triggered a wave of research towards
specialized hardware accelerators. Their performance is often constrained by
I/O bandwidth and the energy consumption is dominated by I/O transfers to
off-chip memory. We introduce and evaluate a novel, hardware-friendly
compression scheme for the feature maps present within convolutional neural
networks. We show that an average compression ratio of 4.4x relative to
uncompressed data and a gain of 60% over existing method can be achieved for
ResNet-34 with a compression block requiring <300 bit of sequential cells and
minimal combinational logic
CAS-CNN: A Deep Convolutional Neural Network for Image Compression Artifact Suppression
Lossy image compression algorithms are pervasively used to reduce the size of
images transmitted over the web and recorded on data storage media. However, we
pay for their high compression rate with visual artifacts degrading the user
experience. Deep convolutional neural networks have become a widespread tool to
address high-level computer vision tasks very successfully. Recently, they have
found their way into the areas of low-level computer vision and image
processing to solve regression problems mostly with relatively shallow
networks.
We present a novel 12-layer deep convolutional network for image compression
artifact suppression with hierarchical skip connections and a multi-scale loss
function. We achieve a boost of up to 1.79 dB in PSNR over ordinary JPEG and an
improvement of up to 0.36 dB over the best previous ConvNet result. We show
that a network trained for a specific quality factor (QF) is resilient to the
QF used to compress the input image - a single network trained for QF 60
provides a PSNR gain of more than 1.5 dB over the wide QF range from 40 to 76.Comment: 8 page
Computationally Efficient Target Classification in Multispectral Image Data with Deep Neural Networks
Detecting and classifying targets in video streams from surveillance cameras
is a cumbersome, error-prone and expensive task. Often, the incurred costs are
prohibitive for real-time monitoring. This leads to data being stored locally
or transmitted to a central storage site for post-incident examination. The
required communication links and archiving of the video data are still
expensive and this setup excludes preemptive actions to respond to imminent
threats. An effective way to overcome these limitations is to build a smart
camera that transmits alerts when relevant video sequences are detected. Deep
neural networks (DNNs) have come to outperform humans in visual classifications
tasks. The concept of DNNs and Convolutional Networks (ConvNets) can easily be
extended to make use of higher-dimensional input data such as multispectral
data. We explore this opportunity in terms of achievable accuracy and required
computational effort. To analyze the precision of DNNs for scene labeling in an
urban surveillance scenario we have created a dataset with 8 classes obtained
in a field experiment. We combine an RGB camera with a 25-channel VIS-NIR
snapshot sensor to assess the potential of multispectral image data for target
classification. We evaluate several new DNNs, showing that the spectral
information fused together with the RGB frames can be used to improve the
accuracy of the system or to achieve similar accuracy with a 3x smaller
computation effort. We achieve a very high per-pixel accuracy of 99.1%. Even
for scarcely occurring, but particularly interesting classes, such as cars, 75%
of the pixels are labeled correctly with errors occurring only around the
border of the objects. This high accuracy was obtained with a training set of
only 30 labeled images, paving the way for fast adaptation to various
application scenarios.Comment: Presented at SPIE Security + Defence 2016 Proc. SPIE 9997, Target and
Background Signatures I
YodaNN: An Architecture for Ultra-Low Power Binary-Weight CNN Acceleration
Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have revolutionized the world of
computer vision over the last few years, pushing image classification beyond
human accuracy. The computational effort of today's CNNs requires power-hungry
parallel processors or GP-GPUs. Recent developments in CNN accelerators for
system-on-chip integration have reduced energy consumption significantly.
Unfortunately, even these highly optimized devices are above the power envelope
imposed by mobile and deeply embedded applications and face hard limitations
caused by CNN weight I/O and storage. This prevents the adoption of CNNs in
future ultra-low power Internet of Things end-nodes for near-sensor analytics.
Recent algorithmic and theoretical advancements enable competitive
classification accuracy even when limiting CNNs to binary (+1/-1) weights
during training. These new findings bring major optimization opportunities in
the arithmetic core by removing the need for expensive multiplications, as well
as reducing I/O bandwidth and storage. In this work, we present an accelerator
optimized for binary-weight CNNs that achieves 1510 GOp/s at 1.2 V on a core
area of only 1.33 MGE (Million Gate Equivalent) or 0.19 mm and with a power
dissipation of 895 {\mu}W in UMC 65 nm technology at 0.6 V. Our accelerator
significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art in terms of energy and area
efficiency achieving 61.2 TOp/s/[email protected] V and 1135 GOp/s/[email protected] V, respectively
CBinfer: Exploiting Frame-to-Frame Locality for Faster Convolutional Network Inference on Video Streams
The last few years have brought advances in computer vision at an amazing
pace, grounded on new findings in deep neural network construction and training
as well as the availability of large labeled datasets. Applying these networks
to images demands a high computational effort and pushes the use of
state-of-the-art networks on real-time video data out of reach of embedded
platforms. Many recent works focus on reducing network complexity for real-time
inference on embedded computing platforms. We adopt an orthogonal viewpoint and
propose a novel algorithm exploiting the spatio-temporal sparsity of pixel
changes. This optimized inference procedure resulted in an average speed-up of
9.1x over cuDNN on the Tegra X2 platform at a negligible accuracy loss of <0.1%
and no retraining of the network for a semantic segmentation application.
Similarly, an average speed-up of 7.0x has been achieved for a pose detection
DNN and a reduction of 5x of the number of arithmetic operations to be
performed for object detection on static camera video surveillance data. These
throughput gains combined with a lower power consumption result in an energy
efficiency of 511 GOp/s/W compared to 70 GOp/s/W for the baseline.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1704.0431
Hyperdrive: A Multi-Chip Systolically Scalable Binary-Weight CNN Inference Engine
Deep neural networks have achieved impressive results in computer vision and
machine learning. Unfortunately, state-of-the-art networks are extremely
compute and memory intensive which makes them unsuitable for mW-devices such as
IoT end-nodes. Aggressive quantization of these networks dramatically reduces
the computation and memory footprint. Binary-weight neural networks (BWNs)
follow this trend, pushing weight quantization to the limit. Hardware
accelerators for BWNs presented up to now have focused on core efficiency,
disregarding I/O bandwidth and system-level efficiency that are crucial for
deployment of accelerators in ultra-low power devices. We present Hyperdrive: a
BWN accelerator dramatically reducing the I/O bandwidth exploiting a novel
binary-weight streaming approach, which can be used for arbitrarily sized
convolutional neural network architecture and input resolution by exploiting
the natural scalability of the compute units both at chip-level and
system-level by arranging Hyperdrive chips systolically in a 2D mesh while
processing the entire feature map together in parallel. Hyperdrive achieves 4.3
TOp/s/W system-level efficiency (i.e., including I/Os)---3.1x higher than
state-of-the-art BWN accelerators, even if its core uses resource-intensive
FP16 arithmetic for increased robustness
Chipmunk: A Systolically Scalable 0.9 mm, 3.08 Gop/s/mW @ 1.2 mW Accelerator for Near-Sensor Recurrent Neural Network Inference
Recurrent neural networks (RNNs) are state-of-the-art in voice
awareness/understanding and speech recognition. On-device computation of RNNs
on low-power mobile and wearable devices would be key to applications such as
zero-latency voice-based human-machine interfaces. Here we present Chipmunk, a
small (<1 mm) hardware accelerator for Long-Short Term Memory RNNs in UMC
65 nm technology capable to operate at a measured peak efficiency up to 3.08
Gop/s/mW at 1.24 mW peak power. To implement big RNN models without incurring
in huge memory transfer overhead, multiple Chipmunk engines can cooperate to
form a single systolic array. In this way, the Chipmunk architecture in a 75
tiles configuration can achieve real-time phoneme extraction on a demanding RNN
topology proposed by Graves et al., consuming less than 13 mW of average power
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