Exploiting Kernel Compression on BNNs
December 01, 2022 Β· Declared Dead Β· π Design, Automation and Test in Europe
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Authors
Franyell Silfa, Jose Maria Arnau, Antonio GonzΓ‘lez
arXiv ID
2212.00608
Category
cs.AR: Hardware Architecture
Cross-listed
cs.CV,
cs.LG
Citations
0
Venue
Design, Automation and Test in Europe
Last Checked
3 months ago
Abstract
Binary Neural Networks (BNNs) are showing tremendous success on realistic image classification tasks. Notably, their accuracy is similar to the state-of-the-art accuracy obtained by full-precision models tailored to edge devices. In this regard, BNNs are very amenable to edge devices since they employ 1-bit to store the inputs and weights, and thus, their storage requirements are low. Also, BNNs computations are mainly done using xnor and pop-counts operations which are implemented very efficiently using simple hardware structures. Nonetheless, supporting BNNs efficiently on mobile CPUs is far from trivial since their benefits are hindered by frequent memory accesses to load weights and inputs. In BNNs, a weight or an input is stored using one bit, and aiming to increase storage and computation efficiency, several of them are packed together as a sequence of bits. In this work, we observe that the number of unique sequences representing a set of weights is typically low. Also, we have seen that during the evaluation of a BNN layer, a small group of unique sequences is employed more frequently than others. Accordingly, we propose exploiting this observation by using Huffman Encoding to encode the bit sequences and then using an indirection table to decode them during the BNN evaluation. Also, we propose a clustering scheme to identify the most common sequences of bits and replace the less common ones with some similar common sequences. Hence, we decrease the storage requirements and memory accesses since common sequences are encoded with fewer bits. We extend a mobile CPU by adding a small hardware structure that can efficiently cache and decode the compressed sequence of bits. We evaluate our scheme using the ReAacNet model with the Imagenet dataset. Our experimental results show that our technique can reduce memory requirement by 1.32x and improve performance by 1.35x.
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