Tuesday, January 10, 2017

FINN: A Framework for Fast, Scalable Binarized Neural Network Inference / Scaling Binarized Neural Networks on Reconfigurable Logic

Michaela just provided me with some of the latest results on optimizing Binarized Neural networks on FPGAs. This is quite interesting and impressive.





Research has shown that convolutional neural networks contain significant redundancy, and high classification accuracy can be obtained even when weights and activations are reduced from floating point to binary values. In this paper, we present FINN, a framework for building fast and flexible FPGA accelerators using a flexible heterogeneous streaming architecture. By utilizing a novel set of optimizations that enable efficient mapping of binarized neural networks to hardware, we implement fully connected, convolutional and pooling layers, with per-layer compute resources being tailored to user-provided throughput requirements. On a ZC706 embedded FPGA platform drawing less than 25 W total system power, we demonstrate up to 12.3 million image classifications per second with 0.31 {\mu}s latency on the MNIST dataset with 95.8% accuracy, and 21906 image classifications per second with 283 {\mu}s latency on the CIFAR-10 and SVHN datasets with respectively 80.1% and 94.9% accuracy. To the best of our knowledge, ours are the fastest classification rates reported to date on these benchmarks.


Scaling Binarized Neural Networks on Reconfigurable Logic by Nicholas J. Fraser, Yaman Umuroglu, Giulio Gambardella, Michaela Blott, Philip Leong, Magnus Jahre and Kees Vissers

Binarized neural networks (BNNs) are gaining interest in the deep learning community due to their significantly lower computational and memory cost. They are particularly well suited to recon gurable logic devices, which contain an abundance of ne-grained compute resources and can result in smaller, lower power implementations, or conversely in higher classification rates. Towards this end, the Finn framework was recently proposed for building fast and exible eld programmable gate array (FPGA) accelerators for BNNs. Finn utilized a novel set of optimizations that enable e fficient mapping of BNNs to hardware and implemented fully connected, non-padded convolutional and pooling layers, with per-layer compute resources being tailored to user-provided throughput requirements. However, FINN was not evaluated on larger topologies due to the size of the chosen FPGA, and exhibited decreased accuracy due to lack of padding. In this paper, we improve upon Finn to show how padding can be employed on BNNs while still maintaining a 1-bit datapath and high accuracy. Based on this technique, we demonstrate numerous experiments to illustrate exibility and scalability of the approach. In particular, we show that a large BNN requiring 1.2 billion operations per frame running on an ADM-PCIE-8K5 platform can classify images at 12 kFPS with 671 mus latency while drawing less than 41W board power and classifying CIFAR-10 images at 88.7% accuracy. Our implementation of this network achieves 14.8 trillion operations per second. We believe this is the fastest classification rate reported to date on this benchmark at this level of accuracy. 





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