Abstract:This paper proposes a high-performance and energy-efficient optical near-sensor accelerator for vision applications, called Lightator. Harnessing the promising efficiency offered by photonic devices, Lightator features innovative compressive acquisition of input frames and fine-grained convolution operations for low-power and versatile image processing at the edge for the first time. This will substantially diminish the energy consumption and latency of conversion, transmission, and processing within the established cloud-centric architecture as well as recently designed edge accelerators. Our device-to-architecture simulation results show that with favorable accuracy, Lightator achieves 84.4 Kilo FPS/W and reduces power consumption by a factor of ~24x and 73x on average compared with existing photonic accelerators and GPU baseline.
Abstract:Targeting vision applications at the edge, in this work, we systematically explore and propose a high-performance and energy-efficient Optical In-Sensor Accelerator architecture called OISA for the first time. Taking advantage of the promising efficiency of photonic devices, the OISA intrinsically implements a coarse-grained convolution operation on the input frames in an innovative minimum-conversion fashion in low-bit-width neural networks. Such a design remarkably reduces the power consumption of data conversion, transmission, and processing in the conventional cloud-centric architecture as well as recently-presented edge accelerators. Our device-to-architecture simulation results on various image data-sets demonstrate acceptable accuracy while OISA achieves 6.68 TOp/s/W efficiency. OISA reduces power consumption by a factor of 7.9 and 18.4 on average compared with existing electronic in-/near-sensor and ASIC accelerators.
Abstract:Digital technologies have made it possible to deploy visual sensor nodes capable of detecting motion events in the coverage area cost-effectively. However, background subtraction, as a widely used approach, remains an intractable task due to its inability to achieve competitive accuracy and reduced computation cost simultaneously. In this paper, an effective background subtraction approach, namely NeSe, for tiny energy-harvested sensors is proposed leveraging non-volatile memory (NVM). Using the developed software/hardware method, the accuracy and efficiency of event detection can be adjusted at runtime by changing the precision depending on the application's needs. Due to the near-sensor implementation of background subtraction and NVM usage, the proposed design reduces the data movement overhead while ensuring intermittent resiliency. The background is stored for a specific time interval within NVMs and compared with the next frame. If the power is cut, the background remains unchanged and is updated after the interval passes. Once the moving object is detected, the device switches to the high-powered sensor mode to capture the image.