4.8 Article

DNN Model Compression for IoT Domain-Specific Hardware Accelerators

Journal

IEEE INTERNET OF THINGS JOURNAL
Volume 9, Issue 9, Pages 6650-6662

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JIOT.2021.3111723

Keywords

Deep neural network (DNN) accelerator; DNN model compression; domain-specific accelerator; energy versus performance versus accuracy tradeoff; neural networks

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of University and Research (MIUR) [ARS01_00345, ARS01_00353]
  2. University of Catania-Piaceri

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This article proposes a compression technique called LineCompress, which aims to reduce memory and communication overhead on resource-constrained IoT devices, thus improving the inference speed and energy efficiency of deep neural networks.
Machine learning techniques, particularly those based on neural networks, are always more often used at the edge of the network by Internet of Things (IoT) nodes. Unfortunately, the computation capabilities demanded by those applications, together with their energy efficiency-related constraints, exceed those exposed by embedded general-purpose processors. For this reason, the use of domain-specific hardware accelerators (DSAs) is considered the most viable solution to the unsustainable Turing tariff of general-purpose hardware. Starting from the observation that memory and communication traffic account for a large fraction of the overall latency and energy in deep neural network (DNN) inferences, this article proposes a new compression technique aimed at: 1) reducing the memory footprint for storing the model parameters of a DNN and 2) improving DNN inference latency and energy on resource-constrained IoT devices. The proposed compression technique, namely, LineCompress, is applied on a set of representative convolutional neural networks (CNNs) for object recognition mapped on a state-of-the-art DSA targeted for resource-constrained IoT devices. We show that on average, 7.4 x memory footprint reduction can be obtained, thus reducing the memory and communication traffic that result to 77% and 87% inference latency and energy reduction, respectively, trading-off efficiency versus accuracy.

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