SHEARer: Highly-Efficient Hyperdimensional Computing by Software-Hardware Enabled Multifold Approximation

07/20/2020
by   Behnam Khaleghi, et al.
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Hyperdimensional computing (HD) is an emerging paradigm for machine learning based on the evidence that the brain computes on high-dimensional, distributed, representations of data. The main operation of HD is encoding, which transfers the input data to hyperspace by mapping each input feature to a hypervector, accompanied by so-called bundling procedure that simply adds up the hypervectors to realize encoding hypervector. Although the operations of HD are highly parallelizable, the massive number of operations hampers the efficiency of HD in embedded domain. In this paper, we propose SHEARer, an algorithm-hardware co-optimization to improve the performance and energy consumption of HD computing. We gain insight from a prudent scheme of approximating the hypervectors that, thanks to inherent error resiliency of HD, has minimal impact on accuracy while provides high prospect for hardware optimization. In contrast to previous works that generate the encoding hypervectors in full precision and then ex-post quantizing, we compute the encoding hypervectors in an approximate manner that saves a significant amount of resources yet affords high accuracy. We also propose a novel FPGA implementation that achieves striking performance through massive parallelism with low power consumption. Moreover, we develop a software framework that enables training HD models by emulating the proposed approximate encodings. The FPGA implementation of SHEARer achieves an average throughput boost of 104,904x (15.7x) and energy savings of up to 56,044x (301x) compared to state-of-the-art encoding methods implemented on Raspberry Pi 3 (GeForce GTX 1080 Ti) using practical machine learning datasets.

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