CVJul 24, 2023Code
Automotive Object Detection via Learning Sparse Events by Spiking NeuronsHu Zhang, Yanchen Li, Luziwei Leng et al.
Event-based sensors, distinguished by their high temporal resolution of 1 $\mathrmμ\text{s}$ and a dynamic range of 120 $\text{dB}$, stand out as ideal tools for deployment in fast-paced settings like vehicles and drones. Traditional object detection techniques that utilize Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) face challenges due to the sparse and asynchronous nature of the events these sensors capture. In contrast, Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) offer a promising alternative, providing a temporal representation that is inherently aligned with event-based data. This paper explores the unique membrane potential dynamics of SNNs and their ability to modulate sparse events. We introduce an innovative spike-triggered adaptive threshold mechanism designed for stable training. Building on these insights, we present a specialized spiking feature pyramid network (SpikeFPN) optimized for automotive event-based object detection. Comprehensive evaluations demonstrate that SpikeFPN surpasses both traditional SNNs and advanced ANNs enhanced with attention mechanisms. Evidently, SpikeFPN achieves a mean Average Precision (mAP) of 0.477 on the GEN1 Automotive Detection (GAD) benchmark dataset, marking significant increases over the selected SNN baselines. Moreover, the efficient design of SpikeFPN ensures robust performance while optimizing computational resources, attributed to its innate sparse computation capabilities. Source codes are publicly accessible at https://github.com/EMI-Group/spikefpn.
AIAug 1, 2024Code
Towards Scalable GPU-Accelerated SNN Training via Temporal FusionYanchen Li, Jiachun Li, Kebin Sun et al.
Drawing on the intricate structures of the brain, Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) emerge as a transformative development in artificial intelligence, closely emulating the complex dynamics of biological neural networks. While SNNs show promising efficiency on specialized sparse-computational hardware, their practical training often relies on conventional GPUs. This reliance frequently leads to extended computation times when contrasted with traditional Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs), presenting significant hurdles for advancing SNN research. To navigate this challenge, we present a novel temporal fusion method, specifically designed to expedite the propagation dynamics of SNNs on GPU platforms, which serves as an enhancement to the current significant approaches for handling deep learning tasks with SNNs. This method underwent thorough validation through extensive experiments in both authentic training scenarios and idealized conditions, confirming its efficacy and adaptability for single and multi-GPU systems. Benchmarked against various existing SNN libraries/implementations, our method achieved accelerations ranging from $5\times$ to $40\times$ on NVIDIA A100 GPUs. Publicly available experimental codes can be found at https://github.com/EMI-Group/snn-temporal-fusion.
CVJul 29, 2022
A One-Shot Reparameterization Method for Reducing the Loss of Tile Pruning on DNNsYanchen Li, Qingzhong Ai, Fumihiko Ino
Recently, tile pruning has been widely studied to accelerate the inference of deep neural networks (DNNs). However, we found that the loss due to tile pruning, which can eliminate important elements together with unimportant elements, is large on trained DNNs. In this study, we propose a one-shot reparameterization method, called TileTrans, to reduce the loss of tile pruning. Specifically, we repermute the rows or columns of the weight matrix such that the model architecture can be kept unchanged after reparameterization. This repermutation realizes the reparameterization of the DNN model without any retraining. The proposed reparameterization method combines important elements into the same tile; thus, preserving the important elements after the tile pruning. Furthermore, TileTrans can be seamlessly integrated into existing tile pruning methods because it is a pre-processing method executed before pruning, which is orthogonal to most existing methods. The experimental results demonstrate that our method is essential in reducing the loss of tile pruning on DNNs. Specifically, the accuracy is improved by up to 17% for AlexNet while 5% for ResNet-34, where both models are pre-trained on ImageNet.