A Construction Kit for Efficient Low Power Neural Network Accelerator Designs

Implementing embedded neural network processing at the edge requires efficient hardware acceleration that combines high computational throughput with low power consumption. Driven by the rapid evolution of network architectures and their algorithmic features, accelerator designs are constantly being...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACM transactions on embedded computing systems 2022-10, Vol.21 (5), p.1-36
Hauptverfasser: Jokic, Petar, Azarkhish, Erfan, Bonetti, Andrea, Pons, Marc, Emery, Stephane, Benini, Luca
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Implementing embedded neural network processing at the edge requires efficient hardware acceleration that combines high computational throughput with low power consumption. Driven by the rapid evolution of network architectures and their algorithmic features, accelerator designs are constantly being adapted to support the improved functionalities. Hardware designers can refer to a myriad of accelerator implementations in the literature to evaluate and compare hardware design choices. However, the sheer number of publications and their diverse optimization directions hinder an effective assessment. Existing surveys provide an overview of these works but are often limited to system-level and benchmark-specific performance metrics, making it difficult to quantitatively compare the individual effects of each utilized optimization technique. This complicates the evaluation of optimizations for new accelerator designs, slowing-down the research progress. In contrast to previous surveys, this work provides a quantitative overview of neural network accelerator optimization approaches that have been used in recent works and reports their individual effects on edge processing performance. The list of optimizations and their quantitative effects are presented as a construction kit, allowing to assess the design choices for each building block individually. Reported optimizations range from up to 10,000× memory savings to 33× energy reductions, providing chip designers with an overview of design choices for implementing efficient low power neural network accelerators.
ISSN:1539-9087
1558-3465
DOI:10.1145/3520127