A Resource-efficient Spiking Neural Network Accelerator Supporting Emerging Neural Encoding
This work addresses the problem of deploying SNNs on low-power systems for real-world applications, representing an incremental improvement in hardware design.
The authors tackled the inefficiency of spiking neural networks (SNNs) due to long spike trains by developing a hardware accelerator that supports emerging neural encoding schemes, achieving 25% lower power consumption and 90% lower latency compared to previous work.
Spiking neural networks (SNNs) recently gained momentum due to their low-power multiplication-free computing and the closer resemblance of biological processes in the nervous system of humans. However, SNNs require very long spike trains (up to 1000) to reach an accuracy similar to their artificial neural network (ANN) counterparts for large models, which offsets efficiency and inhibits its application to low-power systems for real-world use cases. To alleviate this problem, emerging neural encoding schemes are proposed to shorten the spike train while maintaining the high accuracy. However, current accelerators for SNN cannot well support the emerging encoding schemes. In this work, we present a novel hardware architecture that can efficiently support SNN with emerging neural encoding. Our implementation features energy and area efficient processing units with increased parallelism and reduced memory accesses. We verified the accelerator on FPGA and achieve 25% and 90% improvement over previous work in power consumption and latency, respectively. At the same time, high area efficiency allows us to scale for large neural network models. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to deploy the large neural network model VGG on physical FPGA-based neuromorphic hardware.