NEARETJun 10, 2020

Improving Dependability of Neuromorphic Computing With Non-Volatile Memory

arXiv:2006.05868v12 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses reliability issues for neuromorphic computing systems, particularly in hardware using NVM, and is incremental as it builds on existing mapping methods with a focus on reliability.

The paper tackles the problem of circuit aging in neuromorphic hardware using non-volatile memory (NVM) by proposing RENEU, a reliability-oriented mapping approach, which results in an average 38% reduction in circuit aging and an 18% improvement in hardware lifetime with only a 5% performance overhead.

As process technology continues to scale aggressively, circuit aging in a neuromorphic hardware due to negative bias temperature instability (NBTI) and time-dependent dielectric breakdown (TDDB) is becoming a critical reliability issue and is expected to proliferate when using non-volatile memory (NVM) for synaptic storage. This is because an NVM requires high voltage and current to access its synaptic weight, which further accelerates the circuit aging in a neuromorphic hardware. Current methods for qualifying reliability are overly conservative, since they estimate circuit aging considering worst-case operating conditions and unnecessarily constrain performance. This paper proposes RENEU, a reliability-oriented approach to map machine learning applications to neuromorphic hardware, with the aim of improving system-wide reliability without compromising key performance metrics such as execution time of these applications on the hardware. Fundamental to RENEU is a novel formulation of the aging of CMOS-based circuits in a neuromorphic hardware considering different failure mechanisms. Using this formulation, RENEU develops a system-wide reliability model which can be used inside a design-space exploration framework involving the mapping of neurons and synapses to the hardware. To this end, RENEU uses an instance of Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO) to generate mappings that are Pareto-optimal in terms of performance and reliability. We evaluate RENEU using different machine learning applications on a state-of-the-art neuromorphic hardware with NVM synapses. Our results demonstrate an average 38\% reduction in circuit aging, leading to an average 18% improvement in the lifetime of the hardware compared to current practices. RENEU only introduces a marginal performance overhead of 5% compared to a performance-oriented state-of-the-art.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes