학술논문

Architecting a Stochastic Computing Unit with Molecular Optical Devices
Document Type
Conference
Source
2018 ACM/IEEE 45th Annual International Symposium on Computer Architecture (ISCA) ISCA Computer Architecture (ISCA), 2018 ACM/IEEE 45th Annual International Symposium on. :301-314 Jun, 2018
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Computing and Processing
Probabilistic logic
Bayes methods
Random variables
Acceleration
Dynamic range
Machine learning algorithms
Markov random fields
accelerator
machine learning
Bayesian Inference
Markov Chain Monte Carlo
Markov Random Field
emerging technology
Resonance Energy Transfer
Language
ISSN
2575-713X
Abstract
The increasing difficulty in leveraging CMOS scaling for improved performance requires exploring alternative technologies. A promising technique is to exploit the physical properties of devices to specialize certain computations. A recently proposed approach uses molecular-scale optical devices to construct a Resonance Energy based Sampling Unit (RSU) to accelerate sampling from parameterized probability distributions. Sampling is an important component of many algorithms, including statistical machine learning. This paper explores the relationship between application result quality and RSU design. The previously proposed RSU-G focuses on Gibbs sampling using Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) solvers for Markov Random Field (MRF) Bayesian Inference. By quantitatively analyzing the result quality across three computer vision applications, we find that the previously proposed RSU-G lacks both sufficient precision and dynamic range in key design parameters, which limits the overall result quality compared to software-only MCMC implementations. Naively scaling the problematic parameters to increase precision and dynamic range consumes too much area and power. Therefore, we introduce a new RSU-G microarchitecture that exploits an alternative approach to increase precision that incurs 1.27x power and equivalent area, while maintaining the significant speedups of the previous design and supporting a wider set of applications.