Title :
SPERT: a VLIW/SIMD neuro-microprocessor
Author :
K. Asanovic;J. Beck;B.E.D. Kingsbury;P. Kohn;N. Morgan;J. Wawrzynek
Author_Institution :
Int. Comput. Sci. Inst., Berkeley, CA, USA
fDate :
6/14/1905 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
SPERT (synthetic perceptron testbed) is a fully programmable single chip microprocessor designed for efficient execution of artificial neural network algorithms. The first implementation will be in a 1.2 mu m CMOS technology with a peak 50 MHz clock rate. A prototype system is being designed to occupy a double SBus slot within a sun Sparcstation. With fast external SRAM, SPERT will sustain over 300*10/sup 6/ connections per second during pattern classification, and around 100*10/sup 6/ connection updates per second while running the error backpropagation training algorithm. This represents a speedup of around two orders of magnitude over a Sparcstation2 for algorithms of interest. An earlier system, the ring array processor (RAP), used commercial DSP chips. Compared with a RAP multiprocessor of similar performance, SPERT represents over an order of magnitude reduction in cost for problems where fixed-point arithmetics is satisfactory.
Keywords :
"VLIW","CMOS technology","Backpropagation algorithms","Testing","Microprocessors","Algorithm design and analysis","Artificial neural networks","Clocks","Prototypes","Sun"
Conference_Titel :
Neural Networks, 1992. IJCNN., International Joint Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-0559-0
DOI :
10.1109/IJCNN.1992.226926