Janak Sharda

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2papers

2 Papers

AROct 6, 2025
Stratum: System-Hardware Co-Design with Tiered Monolithic 3D-Stackable DRAM for Efficient MoE Serving

Yue Pan, Zihan Xia, Po-Kai Hsu et al.

As Large Language Models (LLMs) continue to evolve, Mixture of Experts (MoE) architecture has emerged as a prevailing design for achieving state-of-the-art performance across a wide range of tasks. MoE models use sparse gating to activate only a handful of expert sub-networks per input, achieving billion-parameter capacity with inference costs akin to much smaller models. However, such models often pose challenges for hardware deployment due to the massive data volume introduced by the MoE layers. To address the challenges of serving MoE models, we propose Stratum, a system-hardware co-design approach that combines the novel memory technology Monolithic 3D-Stackable DRAM (Mono3D DRAM), near-memory processing (NMP), and GPU acceleration. The logic and Mono3D DRAM dies are connected through hybrid bonding, whereas the Mono3D DRAM stack and GPU are interconnected via silicon interposer. Mono3D DRAM offers higher internal bandwidth than HBM thanks to the dense vertical interconnect pitch enabled by its monolithic structure, which supports implementations of higher-performance near-memory processing. Furthermore, we tackle the latency differences introduced by aggressive vertical scaling of Mono3D DRAM along the z-dimension by constructing internal memory tiers and assigning data across layers based on access likelihood, guided by topic-based expert usage prediction to boost NMP throughput. The Stratum system achieves up to 8.29x improvement in decoding throughput and 7.66x better energy efficiency across various benchmarks compared to GPU baselines.

NEJul 1, 2019
On-chip learning in a conventional silicon MOSFET based Analog Hardware Neural Network

Nilabjo Dey, Janak Sharda, Utkarsh Saxena et al.

On-chip learning in a crossbar array based analog hardware Neural Network (NN) has been shown to have major advantages in terms of speed and energy compared to training NN on a traditional computer. However analog hardware NN proposals and implementations thus far have mostly involved Non Volatile Memory (NVM) devices like Resistive Random Access Memory (RRAM), Phase Change Memory (PCM), spintronic devices or floating gate transistors as synapses. Fabricating systems based on RRAM, PCM or spintronic devices need in-house laboratory facilities and cannot be done through merchant foundries, unlike conventional silicon based CMOS chips. Floating gate transistors need large voltage pulses for weight update, making on-chip learning in such systems energy inefficient. This paper proposes and implements through SPICE simulations on-chip learning in analog hardware NN using only conventional silicon based MOSFETs (without any floating gate) as synapses since they are easy to fabricate. We first model the synaptic characteristic of our single transistor synapse using SPICE circuit simulator and benchmark it against experimentally obtained current-voltage characteristics of a transistor. Next we design a Fully Connected Neural Network (FCNN) crossbar array using such transistor synapses. We also design analog peripheral circuits for neuron and synaptic weight update calculation, needed for on-chip learning, again using conventional transistors. Simulating the entire system on SPICE simulator, we obtain high training and test accuracy on the standard Fisher's Iris dataset, widely used in machine learning. We also compare the speed and energy performance of our transistor based implementation of analog hardware NN with some previous implementations of NN with NVM devices and show comparable performance with respect to on-chip learning.