Power-efficient Spiking Neuromorphic Designs using CMOS and Emerging Devices

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2024

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The artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms have played critical roles in a variety of application scenarios in our daily life. The size of state-of-the-art large-scale AI models widely adopted in different domains have been proliferating to tens of billions of parameters. The dedicated AI hardware tailored for data-intensive and computation-intensive AI algorithms consume tremendous power due to data transmission of model parameters and massive computation. The solutions to boosting the power efficiency of AI hardware are two-fold. On the one hand, continuous research effort have been paid to search for more efficient computing paradigm of neural networks. For instance, the bio-inspired neuromorphic computing paradigm stems from the investigation of the natural neural system. The neuromorphic spiking-neural-networks (SNNs) emulate the human brain which transmits information efficiently through spike events. On the other hand, hardware designers have been seeking architecture- and circuit-level solutions to reducing the memory access and computation costs. Processing-in-memory (PIM) paradigm, which is one of the promising solutions, eliminates the power and latency of data transmission by performing data operations directly within the memory.

In this dissertation, my research work on power-efficient neuromorphic designs will be introduced. These neuromorphic designs harness the spike-based data processing and in-memory-computing paradigm. With the help of architecture-level techniques and dedicated circuits with CMOS and emerging memory devices, the proposed designs achieve significant improvement in terms of power efficiency and performance.

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Li, Ziru (2024). Power-efficient Spiking Neuromorphic Designs using CMOS and Emerging Devices. Dissertation, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/30953.

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