A 5 μw Standard Cell Memory-Based Configurable Hyperdimensional Computing Accelerator for Always-on Smart Sensing
Abstract
Hyperdimensional computing (HDC) is a brain-inspired computing paradigm-based on high-dimensional holistic representations of vectors. It recently gained attention for embedded smart sensing due to its inherent error-resiliency and suitability to highly parallel hardware implementations. In this work, we propose a programmable all-digital CMOS implementation of a fully autonomous HDC accelerator for always-on classification in energy-constrained sensor nodes. By using energy-efficient standard cell memory (SCM), the design is easily cross-technology mappable. It achieves extremely low power, 5 mu text{W} in typical applications, and an energy efficiency improvement over the state-of-the-art (SoA) digital architectures of up to 3times in post-layout simulations for always-on wearable tasks such as Electromyography (EMG) hand gesture recognition. As part of the accelerator's architecture, we introduce novel hardware-friendly embodiments of common HDC-algorithmic primitives, which results in 3.3times technology scaled area reduction over the SoA, achieving the same accuracy levels in all examined targets. The proposed architecture also has a fully configurable datapath using microcode optimized for HDC stored on an integrated SCM-based configuration memory, making the design 'general-purpose' in terms of HDC algorithm flexibility. This flexibility allows usage of the accelerator across novel HDC tasks, for instance, a newly designed HDC-algorithm for the task of ball bearing fault detection.