Browsing by Author "Nowshin, Fabiha"
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- Spiking Neural Network with Memristive Based Computing-In-Memory Circuits and ArchitectureNowshin, Fabiha (Virginia Tech, 2021)In recent years neuromorphic computing systems have achieved a lot of success due to its ability to process data much faster and using much less power compared to traditional Von Neumann computing architectures. There are two main types of Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs), Feedforward Neural Network (FNN) and Recurrent Neural Network (RNN). In this thesis we first study the types of RNNs and then move on to Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs). SNNs are an improved version of ANNs that mimic biological neurons closely through the emission of spikes. This shows significant advantages in terms of power and energy when carrying out data intensive applications by allowing spatio-temporal information processing. On the other hand, emerging non-volatile memory (eNVM) technology is key to emulate neurons and synapses for in-memory computations for neuromorphic hardware. A particular eNVM technology, memristors, have received wide attention due to their scalability, compatibility with CMOS technology and low power consumption properties. In this work we develop a spiking neural network by incorporating an inter-spike interval encoding scheme to convert the incoming input signal to spikes and use a memristive crossbar to carry out in-memory computing operations. We develop a novel input and output processing engine for our network and demonstrate the spatio-temporal information processing capability. We demonstrate an accuracy of a 100% with our design through a small-scale hardware simulation for digit recognition and demonstrate an accuracy of 87% in software through MNIST simulations.
- Towards Energy-Efficient Spiking Neural Networks: A Robust Hybrid CMOS-Memristive AcceleratorNowshin, Fabiha; An, Hongyu; Yi, Yang (ACM, 2024)Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) are energy-efficient artificial neural network models that can carry out data-intensive applications. Energy consumption, latency, and memory bottleneck are some of the major issues that arise in machine learning applications due to their data-demanding nature. Memristor-enabled Computing-In-Memory (CIM) architectures have been able to tackle the memory wall issue, eliminating the energy and time-consuming movement of data. In this work we develop a scalable CIM-based SNN architecture with our fabricated two-layer memristor crossbar array. In addition to having an enhanced heat dissipation capability, our memristor exhibits substantial enhancement of 10% to 66% in design area, power and latency compared to state-of-the-art memristors. This design incorporates an inter-spike interval (ISI) encoding scheme due to its high information density to convert the incoming input signals into spikes. Furthermore, we include a time-to-first-spike (TTFS) based output processing stage for its energy-efficiency to carry out the final classification. With the combination of ISI, CIM and TTFS, this network has a competitive inference speed of 2?s/image and can successfully classify handwritten digits with 2.9mW of power and 2.51pJ energy per spike. The proposed architecture with the ISI encoding scheme can achieve ~10% higher accuracy than those of other encoding schemes in the MNIST dataset.