SRAM-Based CIM Architecture Design for Event Detection.

Journal: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
Published Date:

Abstract

Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) play a key role in deep learning applications. However, the high computational complexity and high-energy consumption of CNNs trammel their application in hardware accelerators. Computing-in-memory (CIM) is the technique of running calculations entirely in memory (in our design, we use SRAM). CIM architecture has demonstrated great potential to effectively compute large-scale matrix-vector multiplication. CIM-based architecture for event detection is designed to trigger the next stage of precision inference. To implement an SRAM-based CIM accelerator, a software and hardware co-design approach must consider the CIM macro's hardware limitations to map the weight onto the AI edge devices. In this paper, we designed a hierarchical AI architecture to optimize the end-to-end system power in the AIoT application. In the experiment, the CIM-aware algorithm with 4-bit activation and 8-bit weight is examined on hand gesture and CIFAR-10 datasets, and determined to have 99.70% and 70.58% accuracy, respectively. A profiling tool to analyze the proposed design is also developed to measure how efficient our architecture design is. The proposed design system utilizes the operating frequency of 100 MHz, hand gesture and CIFAR-10 as the datasets, and nine CNNs and one FC layer as its network, resulting in a frame rate of 662 FPS, 37.6% processing unit utilization, and a power consumption of 0.853 mW.

Authors

  • Muhammad Bintang Gemintang Sulaiman
    Industrial Technology Research Institute, 195, Section 4, Zhongxing Road, Zhudong Township, Hsinchu 310401, Taiwan.
  • Jin-Yu Lin
    Industrial Technology Research Institute, 195, Section 4, Zhongxing Road, Zhudong Township, Hsinchu 310401, Taiwan.
  • Jian-Bai Li
    Industrial Technology Research Institute, 195, Section 4, Zhongxing Road, Zhudong Township, Hsinchu 310401, Taiwan.
  • Cheng-Ming Shih
    Industrial Technology Research Institute, 195, Section 4, Zhongxing Road, Zhudong Township, Hsinchu 310401, Taiwan.
  • Kai-Cheung Juang
    Industrial Technology Research Institute, 195, Section 4, Zhongxing Road, Zhudong Township, Hsinchu 310401, Taiwan.
  • Chih-Cheng Lu
    Graduate Institute of Manufacturing Technology, National Taipei University of Technology, Taipei 10608, Taiwan; Department of Intelligent Automation Engineering, National Taipei University of Technology, Taipei 10608, Taiwan; Department of Mechanical Engineering, National Taipei University of Technology, Taipei 10608, Taiwan. Electronic address: cclu23@mail.ntut.edu.tw.