NEJun 5, 2020
Brain-inspired global-local learning incorporated with neuromorphic computingYujie Wu, Rong Zhao, Jun Zhu et al.
Two main routes of learning methods exist at present including error-driven global learning and neuroscience-oriented local learning. Integrating them into one network may provide complementary learning capabilities for versatile learning scenarios. At the same time, neuromorphic computing holds great promise, but still needs plenty of useful algorithms and algorithm-hardware co-designs for exploiting the advantages. Here, we report a neuromorphic hybrid learning model by introducing a brain-inspired meta-learning paradigm and a differentiable spiking model incorporating neuronal dynamics and synaptic plasticity. It can meta-learn local plasticity and receive top-down supervision information for multiscale synergic learning. We demonstrate the advantages of this model in multiple different tasks, including few-shot learning, continual learning, and fault-tolerance learning in neuromorphic vision sensors. It achieves significantly higher performance than single-learning methods, and shows promise in empowering neuromorphic applications revolution. We further implemented the hybrid model in the Tianjic neuromorphic platform by exploiting algorithm-hardware co-designs and proved that the model can fully utilize neuromorphic many-core architecture to develop hybrid computation paradigm.
CVSep 15, 2019
DashNet: A Hybrid Artificial and Spiking Neural Network for High-speed Object TrackingZheyu Yang, Yujie Wu, Guanrui Wang et al.
Computer-science-oriented artificial neural networks (ANNs) have achieved tremendous success in a variety of scenarios via powerful feature extraction and high-precision data operations. It is well known, however, that ANNs usually suffer from expensive processing resources and costs. In contrast, neuroscience-oriented spiking neural networks (SNNs) are promising for energy-efficient information processing benefit from the event-driven spike activities, whereas, they are yet be evidenced to achieve impressive effectiveness on real complicated tasks. How to combine the advantage of these two model families is an open question of great interest. Two significant challenges need to be addressed: (1) lack of benchmark datasets including both ANN-oriented (frames) and SNN-oriented (spikes) signal resources; (2) the difficulty in jointly processing the synchronous activation from ANNs and event-driven spikes from SNNs. In this work, we proposed a hybrid paradigm, named as DashNet, to demonstrate the advantages of combining ANNs and SNNs in a single model. A simulator and benchmark dataset NFS-DAVIS is built, and a temporal complementary filter (TCF) and attention module are designed to address the two mentioned challenges, respectively. In this way, it is shown that DashNet achieves the record-breaking speed of 2083FPS on neuromorphic chips and the best tracking performance on NFS-DAVIS and PRED18 datasets. To the best of our knowledge, DashNet is the first framework that can integrate and process ANNs and SNNs in a hybrid paradigm, which provides a novel solution to achieve both effectiveness and efficiency for high-speed object tracking.
CVMar 20, 2019
Convolution with even-sized kernels and symmetric paddingShuang Wu, Guanrui Wang, Pei Tang et al.
Compact convolutional neural networks gain efficiency mainly through depthwise convolutions, expanded channels and complex topologies, which contrarily aggravate the training process. Besides, 3x3 kernels dominate the spatial representation in these models, whereas even-sized kernels (2x2, 4x4) are rarely adopted. In this work, we quantify the shift problem occurs in even-sized kernel convolutions by an information erosion hypothesis, and eliminate it by proposing symmetric padding on four sides of the feature maps (C2sp, C4sp). Symmetric padding releases the generalization capabilities of even-sized kernels at little computational cost, making them outperform 3x3 kernels in image classification and generation tasks. Moreover, C2sp obtains comparable accuracy to emerging compact models with much less memory and time consumption during training. Symmetric padding coupled with even-sized convolutions can be neatly implemented into existing frameworks, providing effective elements for architecture designs, especially on online and continual learning occasions where training efforts are emphasized.