SPOct 7, 2022
An Energy-Efficient Spiking Neural Network for Finger Velocity Decoding for Implantable Brain-Machine InterfaceJiawei Liao, Lars Widmer, Xiaying Wang et al.
Brain-machine interfaces (BMIs) are promising for motor rehabilitation and mobility augmentation. High-accuracy and low-power algorithms are required to achieve implantable BMI systems. In this paper, we propose a novel spiking neural network (SNN) decoder for implantable BMI regression tasks. The SNN is trained with enhanced spatio-temporal backpropagation to fully leverage its ability in handling temporal problems. The proposed SNN decoder achieves the same level of correlation coefficient as the state-of-the-art ANN decoder in offline finger velocity decoding tasks, while it requires only 6.8% of the computation operations and 9.4% of the memory access.
LGApr 29, 2022
Reducing Neural Architecture Search Spaces with Training-Free Statistics and Computational Graph ClusteringThorir Mar Ingolfsson, Mark Vero, Xiaying Wang et al.
The computational demands of neural architecture search (NAS) algorithms are usually directly proportional to the size of their target search spaces. Thus, limiting the search to high-quality subsets can greatly reduce the computational load of NAS algorithms. In this paper, we present Clustering-Based REDuction (C-BRED), a new technique to reduce the size of NAS search spaces. C-BRED reduces a NAS space by clustering the computational graphs associated with its architectures and selecting the most promising cluster using proxy statistics correlated with network accuracy. When considering the NAS-Bench-201 (NB201) data set and the CIFAR-100 task, C-BRED selects a subset with 70% average accuracy instead of the whole space's 64% average accuracy.
SPAug 28, 2023
EpiDeNet: An Energy-Efficient Approach to Seizure Detection for Embedded SystemsThorir Mar Ingolfsson, Upasana Chakraborty, Xiaying Wang et al.
Epilepsy is a prevalent neurological disorder that affects millions of individuals globally, and continuous monitoring coupled with automated seizure detection appears as a necessity for effective patient treatment. To enable long-term care in daily-life conditions, comfortable and smart wearable devices with long battery life are required, which in turn set the demand for resource-constrained and energy-efficient computing solutions. In this context, the development of machine learning algorithms for seizure detection faces the challenge of heavily imbalanced datasets. This paper introduces EpiDeNet, a new lightweight seizure detection network, and Sensitivity-Specificity Weighted Cross-Entropy (SSWCE), a new loss function that incorporates sensitivity and specificity, to address the challenge of heavily unbalanced datasets. The proposed EpiDeNet-SSWCE approach demonstrates the successful detection of 91.16% and 92.00% seizure events on two different datasets (CHB-MIT and PEDESITE, respectively), with only four EEG channels. A three-window majority voting-based smoothing scheme combined with the SSWCE loss achieves 3x reduction of false positives to 1.18 FP/h. EpiDeNet is well suited for implementation on low-power embedded platforms, and we evaluate its performance on two ARM Cortex-based platforms (M4F/M7) and two parallel ultra-low power (PULP) systems (GAP8, GAP9). The most efficient implementation (GAP9) achieves an energy efficiency of 40 GMAC/s/W, with an energy consumption per inference of only 0.051 mJ at high performance (726.46 MMAC/s), outperforming the best ARM Cortex-based solutions by approximately 160x in energy efficiency. The EpiDeNet-SSWCE method demonstrates effective and accurate seizure detection performance on heavily imbalanced datasets, while being suited for implementation on energy-constrained platforms.
SPSep 3, 2024
Optimization and Deployment of Deep Neural Networks for PPG-based Blood Pressure Estimation Targeting Low-power WearablesAlessio Burrello, Francesco Carlucci, Giovanni Pollo et al.
PPG-based Blood Pressure (BP) estimation is a challenging biosignal processing task for low-power devices such as wearables. State-of-the-art Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) trained for this task implement either a PPG-to-BP signal-to-signal reconstruction or a scalar BP value regression and have been shown to outperform classic methods on the largest and most complex public datasets. However, these models often require excessive parameter storage or computational effort for wearable deployment, exceeding the available memory or incurring too high latency and energy consumption. In this work, we describe a fully-automated DNN design pipeline, encompassing HW-aware Neural Architecture Search (NAS) and Quantization, thanks to which we derive accurate yet lightweight models, that can be deployed on an ultra-low-power multicore System-on-Chip (SoC), GAP8. Starting from both regression and signal-to-signal state-of-the-art models on four public datasets, we obtain optimized versions that achieve up to 4.99% lower error or 73.36% lower size at iso-error. Noteworthy, while the most accurate SoA network on the largest dataset can not fit the GAP8 memory, all our optimized models can; our most accurate DNN consumes as little as 0.37 mJ while reaching the lowest MAE of 8.08 on Diastolic BP estimation.
LGApr 11
End-to-end Automated Deep Neural Network Optimization for PPG-based Blood Pressure Estimation on WearablesFrancesco Carlucci, Giovanni Pollo, Xiaying Wang et al.
Photoplethysmography (PPG)-based blood pressure (BP) estimation is a challenging task, particularly on resource-constrained wearable devices. However, fully on-board processing is desirable to ensure user data confidentiality. Recent deep neural networks (DNNs) have achieved high BP estimation accuracy by reconstructing BP waveforms or directly regressing BP values, but their large memory, computation, and energy requirements hinder deployment on wearables. This work introduces a fully automated DNN design pipeline that combines hardware-aware neural architecture search (NAS), pruning, and mixed-precision search (MPS) to generate accurate yet compact BP prediction models optimized for ultra-low-power multicore systems-on-chip (SoCs). Starting from state-of-the-art baseline models on four public datasets, our optimized networks achieve up to 7.99% lower error with a 7.5x parameter reduction, or up to 83x fewer parameters with negligible accuracy loss. All models fit within 512 kB of memory on our target SoC (GreenWaves' GAP8), requiring less than 55 kB and achieving an average inference latency of 142 ms and energy consumption of 7.25 mJ. Patient-specific fine-tuning further improves accuracy by up to 64%, enabling fully autonomous, low-cost BP monitoring on wearables.
SPFeb 20, 2024Code
SzCORE: A Seizure Community Open-source Research Evaluation framework for the validation of EEG-based automated seizure detection algorithmsJonathan Dan, Una Pale, Alireza Amirshahi et al.
The need for high-quality automated seizure detection algorithms based on electroencephalography (EEG) becomes ever more pressing with the increasing use of ambulatory and long-term EEG monitoring. Heterogeneity in validation methods of these algorithms influences the reported results and makes comprehensive evaluation and comparison challenging. This heterogeneity concerns in particular the choice of datasets, evaluation methodologies, and performance metrics. In this paper, we propose a unified framework designed to establish standardization in the validation of EEG-based seizure detection algorithms. Based on existing guidelines and recommendations, the framework introduces a set of recommendations and standards related to datasets, file formats, EEG data input content, seizure annotation input and output, cross-validation strategies, and performance metrics. We also propose the 10-20 seizure detection benchmark, a machine-learning benchmark based on public datasets converted to a standardized format. This benchmark defines the machine-learning task as well as reporting metrics. We illustrate the use of the benchmark by evaluating a set of existing seizure detection algorithms. The SzCORE (Seizure Community Open-source Research Evaluation) framework and benchmark are made publicly available along with an open-source software library to facilitate research use, while enabling rigorous evaluation of the clinical significance of the algorithms, fostering a collective effort to more optimally detect seizures to improve the lives of people with epilepsy.
LGNov 8, 2019Code
FANN-on-MCU: An Open-Source Toolkit for Energy-Efficient Neural Network Inference at the Edge of the Internet of ThingsXiaying Wang, Michele Magno, Lukas Cavigelli et al.
The growing number of low-power smart devices in the Internet of Things is coupled with the concept of "Edge Computing", that is moving some of the intelligence, especially machine learning, towards the edge of the network. Enabling machine learning algorithms to run on resource-constrained hardware, typically on low-power smart devices, is challenging in terms of hardware (optimized and energy-efficient integrated circuits), algorithmic and firmware implementations. This paper presents FANN-on-MCU, an open-source toolkit built upon the Fast Artificial Neural Network (FANN) library to run lightweight and energy-efficient neural networks on microcontrollers based on both the ARM Cortex-M series and the novel RISC-V-based Parallel Ultra-Low-Power (PULP) platform. The toolkit takes multi-layer perceptrons trained with FANN and generates code targeted at execution on low-power microcontrollers either with a floating-point unit (i.e., ARM Cortex-M4F and M7F) or without (i.e., ARM Cortex M0-M3 or PULP-based processors). This paper also provides an architectural performance evaluation of neural networks on the most popular ARM Cortex-M family and the parallel RISC-V processor called Mr. Wolf. The evaluation includes experimental results for three different applications using a self-sustainable wearable multi-sensor bracelet. Experimental results show a measured latency in the order of only a few microseconds and a power consumption of few milliwatts while keeping the memory requirements below the limitations of the targeted microcontrollers. In particular, the parallel implementation on the octa-core RISC-V platform reaches a speedup of 22x and a 69% reduction in energy consumption with respect to a single-core implementation on Cortex-M4 for continuous real-time classification.
LGJan 18, 2025
CEReBrO: Compact Encoder for Representations of Brain Oscillations Using Efficient Alternating AttentionAlexandru Dimofte, Glenn Anta Bucagu, Thorir Mar Ingolfsson et al.
Electroencephalograph (EEG) is a crucial tool for studying brain activity. Recently, self-supervised learning methods leveraging large unlabeled datasets have emerged as a potential solution to the scarcity of widely available annotated EEG data. However, current methods suffer from at least one of the following limitations: i) sub-optimal EEG signal modeling, ii) model sizes in the hundreds of millions of trainable parameters, and iii) reliance on private datasets and/or inconsistent public benchmarks, hindering reproducibility. To address these challenges, we introduce a Compact Encoder for Representations of Brain Oscillations using alternating attention (CEReBrO), a new small EEG foundation model. Our tokenization scheme represents EEG signals at a per-channel patch granularity. We propose an alternating attention mechanism that jointly models intra-channel temporal dynamics and inter-channel spatial correlations, achieving 2x speed improvement with 6x less memory required compared to standard self-attention. We present several model sizes ranging from 3.6 million to 85 million parameters. Pre-trained on over 20,000 hours of publicly available scalp EEG recordings with diverse channel configurations, our models set new benchmarks in emotion detection and seizure detection tasks, with competitive performance in anomaly classification and gait prediction. This validates our models' effectiveness and efficiency.
LGFeb 10, 2025
FEMBA: Efficient and Scalable EEG Analysis with a Bidirectional Mamba Foundation ModelAnna Tegon, Thorir Mar Ingolfsson, Xiaying Wang et al.
Accurate and efficient electroencephalography (EEG) analysis is essential for detecting seizures and artifacts in long-term monitoring, with applications spanning hospital diagnostics to wearable health devices. Robust EEG analytics have the potential to greatly improve patient care. However, traditional deep learning models, especially Transformer-based architectures, are hindered by their quadratic time and memory complexity, making them less suitable for resource-constrained environments. To address these challenges, we present FEMBA (Foundational EEG Mamba + Bidirectional Architecture), a novel self-supervised framework that establishes new efficiency benchmarks for EEG analysis through bidirectional state-space modeling. Unlike Transformer-based models, which incur quadratic time and memory complexity, FEMBA scales linearly with sequence length, enabling more scalable and efficient processing of extended EEG recordings. Trained on over 21,000 hours of unlabeled EEG and fine-tuned on three downstream tasks, FEMBA achieves competitive performance in comparison with transformer models, with significantly lower computational cost. Specifically, it reaches 81.82% balanced accuracy (0.8921 AUROC) on TUAB and 0.949 AUROC on TUAR, while a tiny 7.8M-parameter variant demonstrates viability for resource-constrained devices. These results pave the way for scalable, general-purpose EEG analytics in both clinical and highlight FEMBA as a promising candidate for wearable applications.
SPDec 20, 2024
EnhancePPG: Improving PPG-based Heart Rate Estimation with Self-Supervision and AugmentationLuca Benfenati, Sofia Belloni, Alessio Burrello et al.
Heart rate (HR) estimation from photoplethysmography (PPG) signals is a key feature of modern wearable devices for health and wellness monitoring. While deep learning models show promise, their performance relies on the availability of large datasets. We present EnhancePPG, a method that enhances state-of-the-art models by integrating self-supervised learning with data augmentation (DA). Our approach combines self-supervised pre-training with DA, allowing the model to learn more generalizable features, without needing more labelled data. Inspired by a U-Net-like autoencoder architecture, we utilize unsupervised PPG signal reconstruction, taking advantage of large amounts of unlabeled data during the pre-training phase combined with data augmentation, to improve state-of-the-art models' performance. Thanks to our approach and minimal modification to the state-of-the-art model, we improve the best HR estimation by 12.2%, lowering from 4.03 Beats-Per-Minute (BPM) to 3.54 BPM the error on PPG-DaLiA. Importantly, our EnhancePPG approach focuses exclusively on the training of the selected deep learning model, without significantly increasing its inference latency
ROJul 23, 2021
SmartHand: Towards Embedded Smart Hands for Prosthetic and Robotic ApplicationsXiaying Wang, Fabian Geiger, Vlad Niculescu et al.
The sophisticated sense of touch of the human hand significantly contributes to our ability to safely, efficiently, and dexterously manipulate arbitrary objects in our environment. Robotic and prosthetic devices lack refined, tactile feedback from their end-effectors, leading to counterintuitive and complex control strategies. To address this lack, tactile sensors have been designed and developed, but they often offer an insufficient spatial and temporal resolution. This paper focuses on overcoming these issues by designing a smart embedded system, called SmartHand, enabling the acquisition and real-time processing of high-resolution tactile information from a hand-shaped multi-sensor array for prosthetic and robotic applications. We acquire a new tactile dataset consisting of 340,000 frames while interacting with 16 everyday objects and the empty hand, i.e., a total of 17 classes. The design of the embedded system minimizes response latency in classification, by deploying a small yet accurate convolutional neural network on a high-performance ARM Cortex-M7 microcontroller. Compared to related work, our model requires one order of magnitude less memory and 15.6x fewer computations while achieving similar inter-session accuracy and up to 98.86% and 99.83% top-1 and top-3 cross-validation accuracy, respectively. Experimental results show a total power consumption of 505mW and a latency of only 100ms.
SPJun 15, 2021
Towards Long-term Non-invasive Monitoring for Epilepsy via Wearable EEG DevicesThorir Mar Ingolfsson, Andrea Cossettini, Xiaying Wang et al.
We present the implementation of seizure detection algorithms based on a minimal number of EEG channels on a parallel ultra-low-power embedded platform. The analyses are based on the CHB-MIT dataset, and include explorations of different classification approaches (Support Vector Machines, Random Forest, Extra Trees, AdaBoost) and different pre/post-processing techniques to maximize sensitivity while guaranteeing no false alarms. We analyze global and subject-specific approaches, considering all 23-electrodes or only 4 temporal channels. For 8s window size and subject-specific approach, we report zero false positives and 100% sensitivity. These algorithms are parallelized and optimized for a parallel ultra-low power (PULP) platform, enabling 300h of continuous monitoring on a 300 mAh battery, in a wearable form factor and power budget. These results pave the way for the implementation of affordable, wearable, long-term epilepsy monitoring solutions with low false-positive rates and high sensitivity, meeting both patient and caregiver requirements.
LGMar 25, 2021
ECG-TCN: Wearable Cardiac Arrhythmia Detection with a Temporal Convolutional NetworkThorir Mar Ingolfsson, Xiaying Wang, Michael Hersche et al.
Personalized ubiquitous healthcare solutions require energy-efficient wearable platforms that provide an accurate classification of bio-signals while consuming low average power for long-term battery-operated use. Single lead electrocardiogram (ECG) signals provide the ability to detect, classify, and even predict cardiac arrhythmia. In this paper, we propose a novel temporal convolutional network (TCN) that achieves high accuracy while still being feasible for wearable platform use. Experimental results on the ECG5000 dataset show that the TCN has a similar accuracy (94.2%) score as the state-of-the-art (SoA) network while achieving an improvement of 16.5% in the balanced accuracy score. This accurate classification is done with 27 times fewer parameters and 37 times less multiply-accumulate operations. We test our implementation on two publicly available platforms, the STM32L475, which is based on ARM Cortex M4F, and the GreenWaves Technologies GAP8 on the GAPuino board, based on 1+8 RISC-V CV32E40P cores. Measurements show that the GAP8 implementation respects the real-time constraints while consuming 0.10 mJ per inference. With 9.91 GMAC/s/W, it is 23.0 times more energy-efficient and 46.85 times faster than an implementation on the ARM Cortex M4F (0.43 GMAC/s/W). Overall, we obtain 8.1% higher accuracy while consuming 19.6 times less energy and being 35.1 times faster compared to a previous SoA embedded implementation.
SPMay 31, 2020
EEG-TCNet: An Accurate Temporal Convolutional Network for Embedded Motor-Imagery Brain-Machine InterfacesThorir Mar Ingolfsson, Michael Hersche, Xiaying Wang et al.
In recent years, deep learning (DL) has contributed significantly to the improvement of motor-imagery brain-machine interfaces (MI-BMIs) based on electroencephalography(EEG). While achieving high classification accuracy, DL models have also grown in size, requiring a vast amount of memory and computational resources. This poses a major challenge to an embedded BMI solution that guarantees user privacy, reduced latency, and low power consumption by processing the data locally. In this paper, we propose EEG-TCNet, a novel temporal convolutional network (TCN) that achieves outstanding accuracy while requiring few trainable parameters. Its low memory footprint and low computational complexity for inference make it suitable for embedded classification on resource-limited devices at the edge. Experimental results on the BCI Competition IV-2a dataset show that EEG-TCNet achieves 77.35% classification accuracy in 4-class MI. By finding the optimal network hyperparameters per subject, we further improve the accuracy to 83.84%. Finally, we demonstrate the versatility of EEG-TCNet on the Mother of All BCI Benchmarks (MOABB), a large scale test benchmark containing 12 different EEG datasets with MI experiments. The results indicate that EEG-TCNet successfully generalizes beyond one single dataset, outperforming the current state-of-the-art (SoA) on MOABB by a meta-effect of 0.25.
SPApr 24, 2020
Q-EEGNet: an Energy-Efficient 8-bit Quantized Parallel EEGNet Implementation for Edge Motor-Imagery Brain--Machine InterfacesTibor Schneider, Xiaying Wang, Michael Hersche et al.
Motor-Imagery Brain--Machine Interfaces (MI-BMIs)promise direct and accessible communication between human brains and machines by analyzing brain activities recorded with Electroencephalography (EEG). Latency, reliability, and privacy constraints make it unsuitable to offload the computation to the cloud. Practical use cases demand a wearable, battery-operated device with low average power consumption for long-term use. Recently, sophisticated algorithms, in particular deep learning models, have emerged for classifying EEG signals. While reaching outstanding accuracy, these models often exceed the limitations of edge devices due to their memory and computational requirements. In this paper, we demonstrate algorithmic and implementation optimizations for EEGNET, a compact Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) suitable for many BMI paradigms. We quantize weights and activations to 8-bit fixed-point with a negligible accuracy loss of 0.4% on 4-class MI, and present an energy-efficient hardware-aware implementation on the Mr.Wolf parallel ultra-low power (PULP) System-on-Chip (SoC) by utilizing its custom RISC-V ISA extensions and 8-core compute cluster. With our proposed optimization steps, we can obtain an overall speedup of 64x and a reduction of up to 85% in memory footprint with respect to a single-core layer-wise baseline implementation. Our implementation takes only 5.82 ms and consumes 0.627 mJ per inference. With 21.0GMAC/s/W, it is 256x more energy-efficient than an EEGNET implementation on an ARM Cortex-M7 (0.082GMAC/s/W).
SPMar 31, 2020
An Accurate EEGNet-based Motor-Imagery Brain-Computer Interface for Low-Power Edge ComputingXiaying Wang, Michael Hersche, Batuhan Tömekce et al.
This paper presents an accurate and robust embedded motor-imagery brain-computer interface (MI-BCI). The proposed novel model, based on EEGNet, matches the requirements of memory footprint and computational resources of low-power microcontroller units (MCUs), such as the ARM Cortex-M family. Furthermore, the paper presents a set of methods, including temporal downsampling, channel selection, and narrowing of the classification window, to further scale down the model to relax memory requirements with negligible accuracy degradation. Experimental results on the Physionet EEG Motor Movement/Imagery Dataset show that standard EEGNet achieves 82.43%, 75.07%, and 65.07% classification accuracy on 2-, 3-, and 4-class MI tasks in global validation, outperforming the state-of-the-art (SoA) convolutional neural network (CNN) by 2.05%, 5.25%, and 5.48%. Our novel method further scales down the standard EEGNet at a negligible accuracy loss of 0.31% with 7.6x memory footprint reduction and a small accuracy loss of 2.51% with 15x reduction. The scaled models are deployed on a commercial Cortex-M4F MCU taking 101ms and consuming 4.28mJ per inference for operating the smallest model, and on a Cortex-M7 with 44ms and 18.1mJ per inference for the medium-sized model, enabling a fully autonomous, wearable, and accurate low-power BCI.
CVDec 10, 2019
HR-SAR-Net: A Deep Neural Network for Urban Scene Segmentation from High-Resolution SAR DataXiaying Wang, Lukas Cavigelli, Manuel Eggimann et al.
Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data is becoming increasingly available to a wide range of users through commercial service providers with resolutions reaching 0.5m/px. Segmenting SAR data still requires skilled personnel, limiting the potential for large-scale use. We show that it is possible to automatically and reliably perform urban scene segmentation from next-gen resolution SAR data (0.15m/px) using deep neural networks (DNNs), achieving a pixel accuracy of 95.19% and a mean IoU of 74.67% with data collected over a region of merely 2.2km${}^2$. The presented DNN is not only effective, but is very small with only 63k parameters and computationally simple enough to achieve a throughput of around 500Mpx/s using a single GPU. We further identify that additional SAR receive antennas and data from multiple flights massively improve the segmentation accuracy. We describe a procedure for generating a high-quality segmentation ground truth from multiple inaccurate building and road annotations, which has been crucial to achieving these segmentation results.