1. McDRAM v2: In-Dynamic Random Access Memory Systolic Array Accelerator to Address the Large Model Problem in Deep Neural Networks on the Edge
- Author
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Seunghwan Cho, Haerang Choi, Eunhyeok Park, Hyunsung Shin, and Sungjoo Yoo
- Subjects
Accelerator ,convolutional neural network ,deep neural network ,dynamic random access memory ,edge inference ,multi-layer perceptron ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
The energy efficiency of accelerating hundreds of MB-large deep neural networks (DNNs) in a mobile environment is less than that of a server-class big chip accelerator because of the limited power budget, silicon area, and smaller buffer size of static random access memory associated with mobile systems. To address this challenge and provide powerful computing capability for processing large DNN models in power/resource-limited mobile systems, we propose McDRAM v2, which is a novel in-dynamic random access memory (DRAM) systolic array accelerator architecture. McDRAM v2 makes the best use of large in-DRAM bandwidths for accelerating various DNN applications. It can handle large DNN models without off-chip memory accesses, in a fast and efficient manner, by exposing the large DRAM capacity and large in-DRAM bandwidth directly to an input systolic array of a processing element matrix. Additionally, it maximizes data reuse using a systolic multiply-accumulate (MAC) structure. The proposed architecture maximizes the utilization of large-scale MAC units by judiciously exploiting the DRAM's internal bus and buffer structure. An evaluation of large DNN models in the fields of image classification, natural language processing, and recommendation systems shows that it achieves 1.7 times tera operations per second (TOPS), 3.7 times TOPS/watt, and 8.6 times TOPS/mm2 improvements over a state-of-the-art mobile graphics processing unit accelerator, and 4.1 times better energy efficiency over a state-of-the-art server-class accelerator. Moreover, it incurs a minimal overhead, i.e., a 9.7% increase in area, and uses less than 4.4 W of peak operating power.
- Published
- 2020
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