Leveraging Automated Mixed-Low-Precision Quantization for tiny edge microcontrollers
This work addresses memory limitations for deploying DNNs on edge microcontrollers, offering an incremental improvement over existing quantization methods.
The paper tackles the problem of deploying accurate deep neural networks on memory-constrained tiny microcontrollers by developing an automated mixed-precision quantization flow, achieving up to 68.4% accuracy on ImageNet with MobileNetV1, which is 4% more accurate than 8-bit networks under the same memory limits.
The severe on-chip memory limitations are currently preventing the deployment of the most accurate Deep Neural Network (DNN) models on tiny MicroController Units (MCUs), even if leveraging an effective 8-bit quantization scheme. To tackle this issue, in this paper we present an automated mixed-precision quantization flow based on the HAQ framework but tailored for the memory and computational characteristics of MCU devices. Specifically, a Reinforcement Learning agent searches for the best uniform quantization levels, among 2, 4, 8 bits, of individual weight and activation tensors, under the tight constraints on RAM and FLASH embedded memory sizes. We conduct an experimental analysis on MobileNetV1, MobileNetV2 and MNasNet models for Imagenet classification. Concerning the quantization policy search, the RL agent selects quantization policies that maximize the memory utilization. Given an MCU-class memory bound of 2MB for weight-only quantization, the compressed models produced by the mixed-precision engine result as accurate as the state-of-the-art solutions quantized with a non-uniform function, which is not tailored for CPUs featuring integer-only arithmetic. This denotes the viability of uniform quantization, required for MCU deployments, for deep weights compression. When also limiting the activation memory budget to 512kB, the best MobileNetV1 model scores up to 68.4% on Imagenet thanks to the found quantization policy, resulting to be 4% more accurate than the other 8-bit networks fitting the same memory constraints.