Neuromorphic computing is an emerging field with the potential to offer performance and energy-efficiency gains over traditional machine learning approaches. Most neuromorphic hardware, however, has been designed with limited concerns to the problem of integrating it with other components in a heterogeneous System-on-Chip (SoC). Building on a state-of-the-art reconfigurable neuromorphic architecture, we present the design of a neuromorphic hardware accelerator equipped with a programmable interface that simplifies both the integration into an SoC and communication with the processor present on the SoC. To optimize the allocation of on-chip resources, we develop an optimizer to restructure existing neuromorphic models for a given hardware architecture, and perform design-space exploration to find highly efficient implementations. We conduct experiments with various FPGA-based prototypes of many-accelerator SoCs, where Linux-based applications running on a RISC-V processor invoke Pareto-optimal implementations of our accelerator alongside third-party accelerators. These experiments demonstrate that our neuromorphic hardware, which is up to 89× faster and 170× more energy efficient after applying our optimizer, can be used in synergy with other accelerators for different application purposes.
CITATION STYLE
Clair, J., Eichler, G., & Carloni, L. P. (2023). SpikeHard: Efficiency-Driven Neuromorphic Hardware for Heterogeneous Systems-on-Chip. ACM Transactions on Embedded Computing Systems, 22(5 s). https://doi.org/10.1145/3609101
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