FAST: A Fully-Concurrent Access Technique to All SRAM Rows for Enhanced Speed and Energy Efficiency in Data-Intensive Applications

Compute-in-memory (CiM) is a promising approach to improving the computing speed and energy efficiency in dataintensive applications. Beyond existing CiM techniques of bitwise logic-in-memory operations and dot product operations, this paper extends the CiM paradigm with FAST, a new shift-based inme...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2022-09
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Yiming, Fu, Yushen, Lee, Mingyen, Sumitha George, Liu, Yongpan, Narayanan, Vijaykrishnan, Yang, Huazhong, Li, Xueqing
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Compute-in-memory (CiM) is a promising approach to improving the computing speed and energy efficiency in dataintensive applications. Beyond existing CiM techniques of bitwise logic-in-memory operations and dot product operations, this paper extends the CiM paradigm with FAST, a new shift-based inmemory computation technique to handle high-concurrency operations on multiple rows in an SRAM. Such high-concurrency operations are widely seen in both conventional applications (e.g. the table update in a database), and emerging applications (e.g. the parallel weight update in neural network accelerators), in which low latency and low energy consumption are critical. The proposed shift-based CiM architecture is enabled by integrating the shifter function into each SRAM cell, and by creating a datapath that exploits the high-parallelism of shifting operations in multiple rows in the array. A 128-row 16-column shiftable SRAM in 65nm CMOS is designed to evaluate the proposed architecture. Postlayout SPICE simulations show average improvements of 4.4x energy efficiency and 96.0x speed over a conventional fully-digital memory-computing-separated scheme, when performing the 8-bit weight update task in a VGG-7 framework.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2205.11088